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Show Friday March 15, 1929 THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH CALIF. LIVESTOCK AND BABY BEEF SHOW NOV.9-1- 3 Was Perfectly Scandalous By JOHN SMITH iOopjriKht.l AT was the unanimous verdict of the Itocking Chair Brigade as It rocked und knitted and gossiped away the summer ufternoons on the broad of the Willard Mountain Perfectly scandalous, uiy dPar! And, no doubt, the sentence was a Just one. At any rate, the facts apparently spoke for themselves. Marlon had arrived only two weeks ago. Two days later had come John Anderson Gray. That much information the hotel register vouched for. Yet In the ridiculously short time since the two had scraped up an acquaintance, they had developed It Into h flirtation and were now spending hours together, unclmperoned. veranda house. Bel-mo- Thz aid kutoo tutd ottraetiaa, ho ntwlooking, : aaluollt, bp a wood aoverinp and tit wit ut oj wood in On interior. You can do ike tom with pour aid ioruo. Make your 0Id House New at Moderate Cost DONT satisfaction. Call at our offices or better yet, we will call upon you and talk over the things you want to do. We can help and advise you with your plans . . . thkdc your old house It can be ... made attractive, comfortable at moderate cost. The increased value of your property will be much more than the expendi- - .CUUlFitO ture 'required to mod- - u,, your old home-- I an investment that will a source of lasting new-lookin- g, our yard is stocked Y CENTUfUU '3 with the widest variety of American Stand-eraiz- e ard Lumber enough to fill every ingneed. modernia-b- e laughing for quite ten minutes ! Meanwhile the shocking pair were Idly drifting In and out of beauty-hauntebays of the little mountain lake. Marion Belmont, according to the register, sat lazily back against the cushioned thwart of the canoe, her eyes resting dreamily on the tannqd face of the man in the stem, John Anderson Gray. Alan, she said suddenly, "does it seem possible that you have been here nearly two weeks? How the time has pine-seente- d flown Chase Lumber and Coal Co. PHONE 187 UTAH PAYSON didnt come in until twenty-fivnduutes past eleven last uight, whispered Miss Lapharn with pursed He left her lips and hinting eyes. outside her door, which Is opposite mine, and I heard them giggling and They ! It has, indeed, Betty, The Second Annual California Live stock and Baby Beef Show will be held at the Union Stockyards, South San Francisco, November 9 to 13, according to W. H. Moffat. President. In making the formal announcement of the show. Mr. Moffat said: The California Livestock and Baby Beef Show has taken its place as one of the leading educational factors in the development of the livestock industry in the Western States. The support given our first show last fall by the stockmen, breeders, packers, educational forces and the general public, has proved to us that there is an economic' need for a livestock exhibition of this kind and that the entire livestock industry in the West will be benefited by its existence. The second show will be strictly a commercial fat stock show, featuring individual and carload entries of fat cattle, sheep and hogs and will attract exhibits fitted by the most experienced livestock men in the West. The most mportant part of the California Livestock and Baby Beef Show is the Junior division which will feature entries from the livestock proBoys and Girls Clubs, jects of and the Future Farmers of America, representing the Vocational Agricultural Departments of the High Schools. The main purpose of the show is to stimulate an interest in the feeding and better finishing of all classes of livestock. Keen interest is being manifested by the livestock men and educational forces of the Western States in our 1929 Show, and we expect a bigger and better livestock exhibition this year. 4-- II PHILIPPINE DAY TO BE OBSERVED ON MAY 1st he replied. the of the May 1st, anniversary "And, hang it all, I have simply got Battle of Manila, has been designated to get back the first of next week. I know, she said. And of course as Philippine Day by the Trustees of the Leanord Wood Memorial for I must, too. Leprosy, and We might aS well go together, I the Eradication of every town, city, and village in the suppose, he said. Wouldnt it look rather odd? she U. S. has been asked to join in this observance. On May 1st, 1927, Major asked hesitatingly. "American Standard Lumber from America's Best Mills "Ive an Idea, suggested the man General Leonard A. Wood appealed to Lets give them something really the American nation for a fund of $2,000,000 to eradicate leprosy in the worth worrying over. Lets elope And if Mrs. Otl3 could have over- Philippines, where the largest colony piece on each table and the place heard the conversation she would not of these pitiful human beings found ARROWHEAD PLUNGE are living under the Stars cards, tallys and favors carried out have needed the little episode in the anywhere, TO OPEN SATURDAY and Stripes. The response was ininwith the office to her were idea. Present supply post the St. Patrick MARCH 16 stantaneous, over $1 000,000 having Mr. and Mrs. R. Lester Spurrier, Mr. formation she gave out later to her been contributed ; and on May 1st to be In the little friends. Chancing The management have just completed and Mrs. Frank Blair, Mr. and Mrs office Immediately in the rear of Miss 1929, an effort will be made to reach comMrs. Bert Stev-en- s Belmont, she could not help overhear- the objective of the campaign painting and thoroughly renovating Jesse Earl, Mr. and pleting the memorial of this great Mr. Mrs. Mr. mall. and bathStevens, the for the Ray of the and latters exterior interior inquiry the ing soldiers work among the lepers of Mr. Any letters, please, lilted the low the ing resort. A modern heating plant and Mrs. Eustace Mendenhall. Philippine Islands. Mr. and contralto voice, for Mrs. Brad er. I has been installed which will insure and Mrs. Henry Erlandson. The construction of new buildings, Miss Belmont? mean, Mrs. Erlandson were awarded the of entire new units, of one completely warmth and comfort to all. She isnt using her own name, merit to is be invited prize and Mr. and Mrs Spurrier was the message Mrs. Otis brought new leprosarium has already begun present Everyone at Culion, which is the Philippine on Saturday, March 16 the opening the consolation. in disseminating her confederates Island of the Living Dead. The And shes married! scandal. day and get a free swim. If you ur.ds are being expended in erecting ventured knows? I he wonder if ,, have your own towel and suit bring Mrs. B. L. Jensen and Mrs. L. aboratory buildings, living quarters Miss Scobie, who concealed a lurking for the staff, and receiving stations them along. entertained at a delightful admiration for th tall, well-knfigon neighboring islands, as well as in If he Bridge Dinner Saturday evening at ure of John Anderson Gray. creasing the personnel for carrying Mrs. Carl 0. Nelson was hostess the Jensen home on Utah Avenue. doesnt, it might be a kindness to let on the work necessary to complete at a delightful Dinner Party at her The table decorations were carried him know. wiping out of the disease throughout They managed it that very after- the world. home Monday evening. Spring flow- out in St. Patricks colors and the idea For the Culion colony be called con Is a great experiment sta ers were used to decorate the rooms was also used for the menu. Cards noon with what might actually slderable finesse. Miss Scobie was the tion, for the hundreds of leper camps and sweet peas in shades of pink were placed for Mr. and Mrs. O. C. appointed spokesman. Oh, Mr. Gray, and colonies in other lands. The were on each table. Covers were Nielson, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer McBeth, she said Invitingly as that gentlema actual maintenance of the colony, the placed for Mr. and Mrs. Sid Coray, Miss May McBeth, Mr. and Mrs. W. came out from the office, for the mo- housing , feeding and clothing, is Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Cloward Jr., Mr. C. McCormck, Mr. and Mrs. Byron ment unaccompanied. Isnt it a beau- taken care of by the Philippine Gov and Mrs. Albert H, Powell, Mr. and F. Ott, Mr. and Mrs Will McClellan, tiful day? By the way. Miss Miss ernment, which gives two per cent seems so young, you would of the total governmental income, or Mrs. R. W. McMullin, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Amos, Mr. and Belmont d of its total health approprinever think she was married! F. E. H. Street, Mr. and Mrs. John Mrs Floyd Wilson, Mr. and Mrs Indeed not, agreed the gentleman ation. There are 3 000,000 lepers in the Oleson, Mr. and Mrs. James Clove, Fearn Gray, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Eraddressed, most heartily. Then, in Mrs. Emma Wilson and Mrs. Clara landson, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Earl, Mr surprise, Married? Married? Oh. world, 12,000 of whom are on the ! And be disap- Philippine Islands alone; and Culion, Page. Progressive Rook was played and Mrs. Stanley Wilson, Mr. and no, not married an island 200 miles south of Manila within. peared suddenly Mr. Mrs. and the Ray Mrs. Chase, evening. George during I am has facilities for caring for 6,000 of Poor man, murmured, they Monsen, Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Reece, afraid It will go hard with him. them. Mrs. E. E. Robinson entertained a Mrs. Harold Black. Mr. Jensen and And apparently it did go so hard Very little attention was paid to Mr and Mrs. Earl rethe Dr. Stewart. home the next of friends that the leprosy problem in the Philipher at Monday poor very morning group Dinner was served in the ceived the high score prize and Mr. man left the hotel, bag in hand, time pines before the United States asevening. sumed responsibility for its governfor the nine oclock train. consolation early evening, followed with bridge. and Mrs. T. E. Reece the ment. It was then estimated that A drove the bus later minutes few Sweet peas wene used for the center- - gift. And the there were ten thousand lepers in the up to the veranda steps. waiting row of ladles gasped to see Islands, their existence comparable ft-They were Pete putting in Miss Belmonts trunk. only to a living death. besides for afflicted, suffering doubly As she came out, Mrs. Otis could not refrain from saying, It would from this dread disease, they were be so lonesome for you here, without also subject to ostracism and distressing privations due to extreme poverty. (The Doctor of Towns) Mr. Gray. for the past twenty years However, to woman started The other reply, SAYS treatment of leprosy and care the whimthought better of It, smiled has been steadily carried on, and inWHY SHOULDNT YOU GET BEHIND AND PUSH to other's down bent and the sically, credible progress has been made, par. (Mice still stick their heads into cheese traps; flies still swarm atop poi- ear. Dont tell a soul, she mur- ticularly during the past few years, I are elopwhen the work has been greatly insoned honey; moths still fly into the candle flame; bumble bees still swarm mured. "Mr. Gray and fish ing! Dr. H. to a' Vuzzing jug; sheep still follow the leader over a cliff; tensified. Reports from Mrs. Otis opened both eyes and still swims up the river. Windsor Wade, the American But mouth. she cried. Eloping at Culion, indicate increasing They Never learn anything no matter how many examples, how many of their fellows, they go on doing the same thing in the same you are married! success in the use of the chaulmoogra Miss Belmont nodded. oil treatment, by which it has been way, generation after generation and die. in And youre not a widow? A town doesnt learn and profit from experiences of other towns will go possible to cheek leprosy even Miss Belmont shook her head. And experts the same way as the mouse, the fly, the moth, the bee and the poor fish. advanced stages. fairly And youre not divorced? Because thy do not learn from experience is reason for 91 towns in one in various parts of the . world are ten-yeone an in of a of existence But out period to head. average she shook her state alone Again pass now experimenting on a less painful to a county for some states. Such towns are in a rut- - and the only differ- we belong to each other, she method of administering this cure. ence between a rut and the grave is the depth. pered fatuously, "and that is all that Dr. Wade states that 1700 negatives Who doesnt kow that to stand still is getting nowhere? In nature in counts have already been returned to their Some minutes later, as the White home as cured, eighty cases having business in every human endeavor to cease to grow is to perish one way Mountain express hummed over the left Culion in January and February or another. Bruce Barton says, When we quit changing we are through. rails, two of its passengers exchanged of this year. It is hoped completely to eradicate The change that will pay the greatest dividened to any commumty is for confidences. I always maintained, Alan, said this terrible scourage in ten years in the citizens to quit thinking that their town is something that will take care funds of itself, or that the mayor, the heads of the service clubs and othr civic one of them, that the one person to the Philippines if the necessary estabcan be to done. stations be has raised. If whatever are do an be will would organizations really appreciate youth to think about your commuity refusal to change old, old man, and the one person to lished where those suffering from Refusal on yoiv-vpar- t in the early stages of the dissive to active, is COSTING you money. enjoy a trousseau and honeymoon leprosy your attitude froy come and receive intensive can sease backin worn-oufrom front of t would be a. leaning mother, tired You and a fewVjiers, by changing positions treatment, the colony on Culion will wards to the one ifbhind pushing forward will MAKE you money and make the responsibilities of housekeeping be reserved for the more advanced which in more work more place the one do interesting attractive, and making gown your community a bettter, In the present stage of develcases. of three. Well, running away up here to live, work, play and make money. opment the prospect of cure is better Its a man to man proposition: Is there any real reason why you shouldnt and pretending we didnt kuow each the earlier the case is treated, though, other was somewhat like that. Anyget behind And push? lepers are not discovered generally, way, it was great! I hope we find in the early stages. And some of all right children mother and the Culion colonists must, unforCopyright, 1929, A. D. Stone. Reproduction prohibited in whole or in part 'My conscience bothers me a little classified as hopeless. be tunately, is about the other guests especially This Town Doctor Article, one of a series of fifty-tw- o On this island, the lepers have those old ladles,' admitted her in the with Chronicle cooperation The Payson Payson built up a real community, many of published by Perhaps we ought to have them leading surprisingly normal lives Lions Club. told them at the end. in spite of their physical condition. I dont said Betty Some ' of them live in little huts, think so, Note: These articles are written by The Town Doctor, without prejudice We will surely never made of nalm or grass, with thatched thoughtfully. or malice and are impersonal. They treat each subject as applied 5n general not to a particular town. Opinions favorable or otherwise on subjects see any of them again. And I really roofs. Then there are think they eujoy being shocked!" concrete houses, long and low. covered are solicited and may be addressed to the paper in which these artAnd she was right It bad been each dwelling divided into several icles appear, or to The Town Doctor, Suite 350, 'McCormick Building, Chicthe most wonderful summer of their rooms, where groups of lepers live. ago, Illinois. Urea for the Rocking Chair Brigade. 1 They farm, have their own garJens, and sell merchandise to each other. They have organized their own orchestras and athletic associations; and they have an open-ai- r theatre, reading rooms, a hospital schools for the children, and stores. They even celebrate various holidays and have fiestas. It is an astounding fact that children of leprous parents are born clean, for leprosy is not hereditary Yet there are at Culion today hundreds of unfortunate boys and girls, as yet untouched by the dread disease but destined to live in a leper colony and finally themselves to become victims, for the present Childrens Home is too small to accomodate another child. To spare the children of lepers this monstrous fate, $100,000 of the amount raised will be expended in erecting a new and more adequate building. Dr. Wade, who has not been away from the burning heat of the tropics for twelve years, and a group of physicians trained in the Philippines have buried themselves in this far-of- f colony, devoting their lives to free these outcasts of humanity from the ravages of leprosy. A prominent citizen in every town and city n the United States has been asked to appoint a committee of local business men who will become responsible for the raising of a certain sum of money in each locality to help rid the world of leprosy. The Trustees of the Leonard Wood Memorial, which is making this plan are as follows: General operative, James G. Ilarbord, Chairman, General Samuel McRoberts, Robert L. Robert W, Racon, Eversly Child3 II. Finley, deForest, Dr. John Charles E. Hughes, Arthur W. Page, Kermit Roosevelt, Colonel Henry L. Stimson, and Owen D. Young. The headquarters are in the Metropolitan Tower, New York C y. In the Matter of the Estate of J. S. HUISH, Deceased Creditors will present claim with vouchers atttached to the undersigned administrator at his residence in Benjamin, Utah, on or before the MARGARET 6th day of May, 1929. ROY SELMAN, Administrator of the Estate of Margaret J. S. Huish, Deceased. R. W. McMULLIN, Attorney for the Administrator, Payson, Utah First publication March 2. 1929 Last publication March 22, 1929 NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT IN AND FOR UTAH COUNTY, STATE OF UTAH. In the Matter of the Estate of ALVIRA V. A DIXON, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers atttached to the undersigned administrator residence in Benjamin, Utah, on or before the 6th day of May, 1929, ROY SELMAN, Administrator of the Estate of Alvira V. A. Dixon, Deceased. R. W. McMULLIN, Attorney for the at-hi- s Administrator, Payson, Utah First publication March 2. 1929 Last publication March 22, 1929 HIGHWAYS AND FARM RELIEF SUCCESS The junor high school opera, The Toreadors, which was given Friday, March 8, in the school auditorium ' was a huge success. The main characters and the chorus were well chosen and all played their parts extremely well.. The costumes for the principal characters were rented from the Costume house in Salt Lake. The girls who were in the chorus made their costumes. Some of the girls who were not In the opera made costumes for the boys. A matinee was presented in the afternoon at 3:15 P. M. and was largely attended by pupils of the local schools. ST. PATRICKS DAY HAS A HOST OF TRADITIONS All of know that March 17th is St. Patricks Day, but how many of ua know the real significance of the host of traditions which have gathered about the celebration of that day? Do you know what the shamrock really is and why it is the symbol of St. Patricks Day? Do you know what St. Patricks nationality was? If you dont know the answer to those questions as well as several others' connected with St. Patricks Day, you will enjoy an illustrated feature article by Elmo Scott Watson in this issue of The Payson Chronicle. Look for Legendary Lore of St. Patricks Day, in this issue! CREDITORS IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT IN AND FOR UTAH COUNTY, STATE OF UTAH. JR. HIGH OPERA IS HUGE it one-thir- NOTICE TO By bringing the farmer into closer touch with his markets and increasing the interrelation between cities and agricultural districts, improved highways do much toward solving the much discussed problem of farm relief. The American Automobile Association points out that while 5 007, 124, or more than one-fift- h of all motor owned are vehicles, by farmers, only 7.5 per cent of all farms are located on macadam, concrete or brick highways, while 43.1 per cent of farms are located on unimproved dirt roads. It is an established fact that transportation is one of the basic factors of prosperity on the farm. While it is impossible to build an expensive paved highway past every farmers door, the use of road oils and different asphaltic mixtures can provide roads at low cost. le Several cases of small pox have developed in Payson and it has been decided to have the school children vaccinated with the consent of parents. This work will be done within the next few days. Mr. and Mrs. John F. Oleson spent Saturday in Salt Lake. iMr. and Mrs Mose Dolly of Spanish Fork were the- - guests of Mr. and Mrs Clarence Stanton, Sunday. Clean, Respectable, Modern to the Minute. Rates without extravagance. Special Rates by the week or month. The TOWN DOCTOR SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Transient rates including FREE GARAGE. 1 ar 1 ' I Youll Smile Too, When You Have U Put In Your COAL You will smile for several reasons. The bill will be less. The quality of the coal better. The promptness with which we handle your order, the care with which we de- liver will please you. Phone 10 for this better coal service. a MUTUAL and STANDARD COAL PAYSON SCE & COAL COMPANY |