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Show THE PAYSONIAN, PAYSON, SHARKS TAKEN OFF NEW YORK Thslr Capture Said to Have Been a Regular Thing Prior to and During Year 1815. f w A shark nowadays even on the most exposed beaches of New York and the metropolitan area is a rarity and a curiosity, but there was a time when these fish used to be caught ofT Catharine slip, says the New York Sun. This was ubout 1S13, "when the fishing smack 8 and fish cars used to unload and load oft this wharf In the East river and "the dead fish thrown out into the water used to attract the sharks. An old man. Sum Way, a porter in the old Cathurine market, earned a reputation as a master shark catcher. "Shark around the slip, was the cry that was raised when a shark was sighted off the pier and then Sam would drop his broom and put out his chain hook and soon would have the giant fish struggling on the dock, lie la said to have hauled In as many us seven In one day, some of them fourteen feet long. Devoe, tlie historian, tells an incident which Is passed on herew ith without confirmation: One day Sam hooked a big one and .he climbed Into a skiff which lay tied to the end of the slip ; the shark took to pulling and broke loose the skiff with Sam In, and away lie went down . speed, nearly the river at race-hors- e as far as Red Hook before he tired out, or Sam could hold him up. He, however, mastered him and brought him back, and Sam after that concluded not to be run away with again. So he stuck to the raft or dock when he fished for shark thereafter." ? 'v 4 PAID BIG PRICE FOR TITLES White Men In 8outh Africa Hardly Recompensed by Appellation of Brave and Noble Indunas. TO RESTOCK Importations of Fir and Spruce From Canada Are to Be Made for the Purpose. NATIONAL TRIBUTE TO The British Isles are to be reforested with Douglas fir and Sitka Starts for $1,000,000 spruce from British Columbia. To ob- Campaign or More to Endo.v Foundation tain the necessary seed, a seed exin exPrcsidents Name. tracting plunt will be established at Westminster by the dominion forestry service. F. D. ROOSEVELT CHAIRMAN Shipment of green cones has been found impracticable. The new plant New York. Prominent men and will handle a ton and a half of cones have organized In every every six hours. The cones will be women dried under hot air blast and as they state In the country In a campaign opening the week of January 10 lo open, the seed will fall from the dryraise $1,000,000 or more to endow the ing cylinder of fine mesh into a hopWoodrow Wilson Foundation, which Present per. requirements eall for 3,000 pounds each of fir and spruce is designed to honor Mr. Wilson and The income seed annually for which it will be perpetuate his Ideals. Wood-ronecessary to gather 120 tons of cones. from this sum will provide the Wilson Awards to be given periSitka spruce cones will he collected on the Queen Charlotte Islands where odically to the individual or group the tree flourishes iu abundance. The that has rendered, within a specified period, meritorious service to democcones of the Douglas fir will be gathered on tbe western slopes of tbe racy, public welfare, liberal thought, or peaie through Justice. Rocky mountains tributary to the The National Committee, headed by Fraser river. This Is fur country of the Hudson's Franklin D. Roosevelt, Democratic In 1920, Bay company, now dosing out its candidate for of each representatives luuds In the prairie pro luces to farm includes settlers. The company's posts are still state. Cleveland II. Dodge of New dotted through this region of primeval York Is chairman of the Executive Committee and Hamilton Holt is Exw ilderness. of the British com- ecutive Director. Fifteen nationally Investigations mission working out the vast refor- known men and women will comprise estation scheme lnne shown Douglas the permanent Board of Trustees, Dr and Sitka spruce best adapt'd for the purpose. Centuries of tree culling have left the Islands of the British group denuded or' forests and reforestation Is necessary to replenish the timber. Vice-Preside- COULDNT RED THE SIGNALS f i k A - ' fam-lahe- pro-port- I 4 i I dark-colore- 1 A, J - 1 1 j iMiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirmiiiiinTTiriiaTnTfrram rmmrmTTrmimiTHy Safer Than Hoarding We've weathered all the storms since 1873 5 S 1 1 1 paid 126 dividends, positors in all parts of the world entrust their savings with us. This is a guarantee of safety that makes hoar'j'ng waste and a folly, your dollars work better business, earn for you. 4 Per Cent Paid on Deposits .UR Trust Depart- ment is well prepared to meet any clients need. Zion's Savings Bank 6 trust ca A Balt Lake City, Utah. I IN FINANCE , that ths board shall h&vs powor to levy for oaeh of tho ensuiag two years, and whoa so oothoiiiod by tho stockholders, the board of directors shall have power to levy nod eolleot such assessment. Ia css tho stockholders shall for any reason fail to vote on tho assessment o bo levied then the directors shall have power to levy the assessment as rceommend-od- . All assessments shall, be levied and collected in the manner provided by law and tbe statutes of the State of Utah in force at the time of making any assessment. This notice is given, and the said meeting in called by order of tho board of directors. ANGUS P. TAYLOR, Secretary. First publication January 13, 1922. Last publication February 3, 1922.' - NOTICE 07 ASSESSMENT. Payson Copper Mining Company. Location of principal place of business, The Modem Pharmacy, Payson, Utah. Notiee is hereby givea that at a meeting of the board of, directors, held on December 3, 1921, an aaaeas-meof fS par 1)00 Asms was levied on tho capital stock of tho corporation, payable at once to the secretary, Bet Bull, in Payson. - i Any stock on which the assessment may remain nnpaid on the second day of January, 1922, will bo delinquent end advertised for sale at poblie auction, and unless payment be made before, will be sold on the first' day of of February, 1922, at 2 o'clock, p.m., of said day, to pay tbe delinquent assessment, together with the costs of advertising and expenses of sale. PAYSON COPPEB MINING CO. By BET BULL Secy. nt . Later, Mystified Newcomers to New York Were Enlightened, and a Little Embarrassed. Their adventure In Swaziland Is told by a doctor - who Just returned Newcomers to New York by steamfrom a ten years sojourn there and ship begin to learn things about the was two white other with men, who, In the Swazi tribe of city as soon as their ves.-e- l gels headmade South Africa negroes. The white men ed up the harbor. There was a party were ,mt eager for the experience, of such on a vessel from Southern and the Initiation was far from an ports. From the roof of a high downtown inducement, the rule requiring that office building they saw what aj they ahould spend ten duys of purihe a string of signal flags ficatory exile from human society, In peared to native dress, with only native weap- snapping In the breeze. Some were ons, depending upon their skill In the white, some were striped ' and one big use of these for food. The doctor told one was a flaming red. If we only knew the code we could with considerable feeling how they tell what they mean, said a member were stripped by the leading mediPerhaps they ind.cate cine man of every shred of clothing, of the party. we ate to take up the what channel and costumes warrior Swazi given conducted Into the hills. They were river." Or nmybe they are weal her warnbitten by Insects, scratched by thorns, of some kind," guessed another. ings their frozen at night, scorched by day, Let's ask one of the officers. bare feet bruised and abraded until They did. The officer looked first they were In agony, kept In constant with the nuked eye and then with his fear of the many poisonous snakes but, most of all, hungry. In spite of glasses.out LTungas tutoring in native methods on Thats the janitor's wash hung as tlie roof to dry, he announced, of taking game, the white men, used The lug red to depending upon the rifie for such he finished his survey. Pittsburgh Dispurposes, nearly starved. However, one is a tablecloth. when the chief medicine man and his patch. assistants came to conduct them back World Press Exhibit at Prague. to the kraal of the queen, the A novel exhibit was staged recently dirty, desperate looking white men, with ten days growth of beard, ut Prague under the auspices of the A large Charles lichal newspapers. were acclaimed brave and noble hall was set aside for the display of newspapers from all principal cities of the world. Of these there were more 8tarllngt Renew War. Following the frost line down from than 4,001), from China', Japan, PalesCanada and the Maine mountains, the tine, Australia, czarist and soviet Rus-.-i.- t, starlings are beginning to return and India, Africa, Turkey and from droves of them may be seen flying .very country of Eui'ope and America. about the suburbs, says the New York More than 300 papers from France Sun. From their posts In the trees were shown. As a matter of fact, the and along the telephone wires they exhibit comprised only a minute whistle to their fellows and hurl deof the world's newspapers, fiance to the English sparrow. hut, from the viewpoint of the CzechoThe starlings, Introduced Into this slovak public, it was very Instructive country several years ago from north- and successful. ern Europe, have proven popular birds. They are industrious bug Record Telephone Conversation. catchers and are said to be the only A teh phone conversation was rebird that will pick a fight with tbe cently held between a ship 100 miles sparrow. The latter, learning through off the Atlantic coast of the United d bitter experience, give their States and Catalina island, 30 miles rivals a wide berth. off the coast of California, wireless The starling, being a cold weather telephony being used over the water bird, generally departs for the North and wire telephony over the hind. This late In the spring. With the first cold Is the first time the voice of man has nap they are back for another seabeen carried across a continent and son's frolic In New Yorks snows. stretriies of two adjacent oceans. The appearance of the books presents a great variety both In form and white and colored paper, Rich Man Felt His Time Well Spent material; and even bank notes, sail millboard, In Impressing Boy With ths cloth and birch bark are being used Value of Money. for text and cover as well. There is no less vurlety with regard to the A small boy tripped and fell on a of the books. There are being type grating set In the pavement the oilier edited novels, poetry, memoirs and night. studies on art. P. Muratov Is proA dime, which bad been clutched in the third volume of his Vihis chubby hand, fell through the ducing sions of Italy." The prices of the grating. handwritten books vary from 1,000 to lie stood there, crying. One of the 25,000 rubles In accordance with marcitys rich men halted beside the boy. ket prices, which In soviet Russia are IVbats the matter, son? he Inrising continuously. Christian Science quired. Monitor, The boy told bis trouble. The man peered through the grating. Camera in Surgical Operations. I see your dime, he said. Moving pictures of surgical operaThe store with which the areaway below the grating was connected was tions have heretofore not been completely successful, owing to the liaclosed. The man pursed his lips and knitted bility of one of the surgeons getting his brows and considered for a mo- In front of tbe camera, says Popular A recently dement or two. And then he smiled. Mechanics Magazine, camera Is to have veloped reported He stuck his cane down betweeu the bars and found that he could reach overcome this difficulty, Tlie camera la completely Inclosed In a globular the dime. He searched hi pockets anj found metal case, which Is located In a tube projecting lrom the celling, directly a penny. the operating table. By means Dye know where you can get a over stick of chewing gum? he asked the of a motor located outside of the room, he camera may be raised, lowyoungster. ered, or turned at any angle, A teleThe boy nodded. When the boy had returned the man scope attachment makes It possible to adjust and focus the camera said: Chew It good and then stick it on promptly. It has recently been tried with grant success. the end of my cane. When this had been done the man knelt down on the pavement and after many attempts brought the dime up. He gave It to the boy and went on his SALEM IRRIGATION AND CAN AX, COMPANY, , NOTICE OP BIENway. NIAL MEETING. Before he had gone many paces a friend caught up with him. Notice is hereby given that the bi"Ive been watching you," the newcomer observed, with a broad smile ennial mooting of the stockholders on his face. You got the kids dime of tho Salem Irrigation , and Canal for him, but it took you twenty min- Company will be held at tho City utes to do It. Why In thunder didnt Hall iu Salem, Utah County, Utah on you give him a dime In the beginning Saturday the 11th day of February 1922, at the hour of 1:30 P.M., for and let it go at that? The rich man looked a't his friend tho purpose of electing officora for tho in silence for a moment before he re- ensuing two years, hearing tho report of tho last two years and voting upon plied : Did you ever in all your life see a the proposition to amend the articles better chance to teach a kid the value of incorporation and tho transaction of money than that was? Louis- of such other business as may properville Courier-Journaly come before the mooting. It is proposed to amend tho Article 18 of said articles of incorporation so that A Shop of Handmade Books. There 1ms been in existence In Mos- tlie same will read as follows ARTICLE IS. At each biennial cow .since October, 1920, a Bookshop of Authors, selling books in manu- meeting of the stockholders of this script. Owing to printing difficulties corporation, tho board of directors many Russian authors have lmd to shall submit an estimate of the costs copy tlieir books themselves and even and the amount of funds necessary illustrate them. Among tlie authors for carrying on tho business of the taking part In the enterprise are company during the ensuing two years Andrei Blely, Boris Zaitsev, Ivan and shall recommend the amount of Lazurevskl, P. Muratov, Feodor Solo-gub- , assessment that should be lovied each the Georgi Tsliulkov and A. Yacovlev, of the cusuing two years, and all ' of them writers of repute In stockholders shall vote upon and Russia. authorize the amount of assessment OBJECT LESSON BRITISH FORESTS sub-chi- 4 - UTAH, JANUARY 27, 1922. l, Lmlerwood ft Underwood. FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT Chairman of the National Committee of the Woodrow Wilson Foundation. , which must Invest the funds la United States or other recognized securities. Five trustees have already been apThe Board of Trustees will also pointed the Jury of Awards of 25 men appoint and women who will select the person or group to whom the award will go. The state chairmen are as follows: ALABAMA Hon. Frank P. Glass, chairman: Hon Sydney J. Bowie, executive chairman. 2227 First avenue Birmingham ARIZONA Hon. A. H. Favour, chairman, Prescott. ARKANSAS Hon. Thomas C. McRae, chairman; Hon W. 8. Hotel Marlon, Goodwin, Little Rock. CALIFORNIA, Northern Section Mrs. Annette Abbott Adams, Exchange chairman, 1032 Merchants Building, San Francisco. CALIFORNIA. Hon. Harrington Southern Section 1976 So. ave- Vermont Brown, chairman, COLORADO Hon. nue, Los Angeles. T. John Barnett, chairman, 610 First National Bank Building, Denver. CONNECTICUT Prof. Irving Fisher, chairman; Prof. Ray Westerfleld, executive chairman, 66 High street. New Haven. DELAWARE Miss H. L. Stadelman, chairman, 710 Blackshlre Road, Wilmington. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Hon. Robert W Woolley, chairman, Continental Trust Building, Washington. FLORIDA John C. Cooper, Jr., Esq., chairman, Atlantic National Bank BuildGEORGIA Hon. Pleaing, Jacksonville sant A. Stovall, chairman. Savannah. luAIIO Hon. James H. Hawley, chairman, Boise. ILLINOIS Hon. Edward N. Hurlev, chairman of organization, Suita IOWA 1411, Steger Building, Chicago. Hon. Edwin T. Meredith, chairman, Herrick Building, Des Moines. KANSAS 1012 Hon Jouett Shouse, chairman, Baltimore avenue. Kansas City. KENW. TUCKY Hon. Robert Bingham, chairman, Louisville Trust Building, LOUISIANA Col. A. T. Louisville. Baton chairman. Rouge. Prescott, MAINE Hon Charles F. Johnson, chairman, Room 500. Congress Square Hotel, Portland. MASSACHUSETTS John F. 101 Tremont Moors, Esq., chairman, MARYLAND Clarence street, Boston K. Bowie, Esq , chairman, Fidelity Building, Baltimore, Md. MICHIGAN Hon. Woodbrldge N. Ferris, chairman. Big Rapids. MINNESOTA Hon. George H. Partridge, chairman, Room 208, 629 Second avenue, south, Minneapolis. MISSISSIPPI Hon Oscar Newton, chairman, Jackson. MISSOURI J. Llonberger Davis. Esq , Federal Reserve Bank Building, St. Louis. MONTANA Hon. Thomas Stout, chairman, Lewtstown. NEBRASKA William F. Baxter, Esq., chairman, care of Thos. Kilpatrick ft Co., Omaha. Hon. William woodburn, NEVADA chairman, Reno. NEW HAMPSHIRE Hon. Robert Jackson, chairman, 26 Capital street, Concord. NEW JERSEY Hon. J. Warren Davis, chairman, Post Office Building, Trenton. NEW MEXICO Hon. Summers Burkhart, chairman, AlNEW YORK Hon. James buquerque. W. Gerard, chairman, 46 Cedar street New York City. NORTH CAROLINA Mrs Josephus Daniels, chairman, Raleigh. NORTH DAKOTA Hon. A. G. Buit, chairman, Rugby. OHIO Hon. Newton D. Baker, chairman. Union National Bank Cleveland. OKLABuilding, HOMA Hon. Charles B. Ames, chairBristol Hotel, Oklahoma City. man, OREGON Hon C. S. Jackson, chairPortland Journal, man, Portland. Hon. Roland 8. MorPENNSYLVANIA Land Title ris, chairman, Building. SOUTH CAROLINA Philadelphia. A. Robert Hon. Cooper, chairman. Columbia SOUTH DAKOTA Hon. Edwin S Johnson, chairman, Yankton. TENNESSEE-Ho- n. Luke Lea. chairman, Nashville Tenneasean, Nashville. TEXAS Thomas S. Taliaferro, Esq., chairman, University Club, Houston. ISLAND Rlohard RHODE Comstock, Esq., chairman, 10 Weybosset street. Hon. James H. UTAH Providence. Moyle, chairman, 411 East First South street, Salt Lake City. VERMONT John Spargo, Esq , chairman. Old BenVIRGINIA Hon. Carter Glass, nington. chairman: Hon. John Skelton Williams, executive chairman, Richmond. WASHINGTON Mrs E. D. Christian, chairman. East 703 Ermina avenue, Spokane WEST VIRGINIA Hon. William E. Chilton, chairman, 411 Union Trust Building. WISCONSIN Karl Mathle Charleston. Esq , chairman, 509 Grant street, Wausau WYOMING T. C. Dlers, Esq., chairman. Sheridan. The campaign, starting on January 16, will continue until the amount necessary to endow the Foundation has been raised A handsome certificate, suitable for framing and bearing a picture of Mr. Wilson, will be prisented to every con'ributor. Contrihulions may be sent to local or state headquarters, or to Hamilton Holt, Executive Erector at National Headquarters, 15u Nassau street. New York. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OP UTAH COUNTY, STATE OF UTAH. LOUELMA on Edge Are Sure Indications that You Have YOU CAN BE . Plaintiff, Defendant, The state of Utah to the sard defendant: You are hereby summond to appear within twenty days after service of this summons upon yen, if served within the eouaty in which this action ia brought; otherwise within thirty days after . service, and defend the above entitled action; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint. This aetion is brought to recover a judgment dissolving the marriage contract heretofore existing between you and the plaintiff. R. W. McMullin attorney for plaintiff. P. O. Address, Payson, Utah. Bleeding and Sore Gums Teeth HAWKINS, vs EUGENE HAWKINS summons. CURED T ownsend's PyorrheaRemedy Will Cure You At All Drug Stores |