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Show THE PAYSONIAN, PAYSON, Tho freight He got $2.61 for it. and other charges totaled $1)1.13. Commenting on some of the answers To the Editor: above and also on the grain quoted lamed Every Friday at Payaon, Utah, Christ went about bealing the marketing movement instituted by the by the Be a Christian and the heath Public the sick. farm bureau, Philadelphia PAYSONIAN PUBLISHING CO. fodger had this to ay in an cd ign is upon you. COMMUNICATIONS. THE PAYSONIAN itorial way: The report of tho grain marketing committee of th0 American Farm $2.50 P.urenu federation has been made and $1.25 There is nothing radical, adopted. Entered at the Postotfiee at PayHon, llolshevistie or dangerous about it. ft strikes, or will strike, a terrible Utah, as second class matter. blow to grain exchanges and to midW. B. ELLSWORTH dlemen; but the farmer nsists that Editor and General Manager he should have more than thirty-foucents of the consumers dollnr and lmt the exchanges and mo middlemen must take less. It is tho sanest and most ambitious effort that the farmer 1ms made for himself. THE LAST GREAT STAND Officers of the Utah Mnte Farm bureau contend there are equally strikPresident Hardings proclamation ing examples in this state of why setting aside the period ol' May 22 to farmers should organize. 28 as Forest Protection week bids tho American people to look to the RAILROADING GOING INTO THE RED protection and care of thoir remaining forest resources. That there is need for such Not only on new railroads building is fully warranted when one but service and trackngo being abanfaces squarely the facts of timber doned is our nations dilemma. depletion. Boosting strikes nnd boosting war Tho Pacific northwest is now the when tho farmers get ten cents ages, nations woodlot how long will it for a calfskin and ten cents a remain such if foroet fires are not for wool anl sell w'hoat for a pound kept out of our timber! dollar a bushel is bankrupting the Unless each man, woman and child railroads and tho lumber industry. our forests realizes a that goes into Between October 1, 1920 and March personal responsibility regarding fire 1, 1921, railroad freight shipments the last great stand of timber of fell off from 1,000,000 carloads a tho northwest will go, just as the week ,1o 700,000 carloads a week. white pine of Now' England and the Less freight moved than for CJ lake states w'ont, nnd like tho yellow with 400,000 idle freight ears years, pine of tho south is going now. in place of continues car shortage. To grow timber on the average when men 's socks are tract of Lind, doing it as a public: War wages for 12,j cents a pair and selling done.! must throe bo utility, things union suits for $1.00, restrict private The owner must bo given the benefit in building and public employment of a moderate tax while his crop of and construction trades to a minimum, timber is being grown. It must bo while profiteering in many lines keeps protected from forest fires due to tho the consumers strike. up ncgligeueo of his neighbor or the Unless there are ninracd wago renegligence of the community, and ho ductions bankruptcy and receiverships must be required to employ sufficient the nro tho only alternative for safeguards in the way his timber is American In August system. railway cut, his slashings disposed of, and 1919 expense of operation was fire danger avoided to actually reIn Fcbrunry 1920 a day. tho land. forest operation cost $11,310,010 a day, an inereaso of $992,800,000 a year. WHY DO FARMERS ORGANIZE? The inereaso in the cost of two of operation labor and coni items Salt Luke, May 11) .ompted by hna been exnetly equal to the total the rapid growth of the farm bureau The increase in railroad expenses. movement throughout the nation, a hist month of gevenment oporntionr newspaper, in one of the prominent Tho Inst a day. eastern cities recbntly instituted . a cast $14,310,0001920 of months four expense operating Why of American railroads was $16,817,-00questionnaire on "this subject: do fanners organize! Homo of tho a day an inereaso of $2,507,000 answers, nrcording to reports received a taken up by wages and fuel day by tho TTtnh State Eturm bureau, increase. Traffic, declines with inare: motor vehicle competition. creased A farmer cannot carry enough hides aerosM the street from his wagon to Modern Values the store to pay for a pair of good exclaimed tho heather Behold, shoes. sage, South Dakota farmer may get 20 to , 3.5 cents for his corn. It costs With an expression solemn, The colored comic gets a page, much to that ship the corn to the Where world news gets a column I AcNew mills in York. processing Washington Star to most tho conservative figcording ures, the corn cost the farmer from Scene of the Crime. 75 cents to a, dollar a bushel to produce. Historians will note that X marks A fanner at Iowa City, Iowa, shipfell the spot whore the Trenty ped a cnrlond of hay to St. Louis. through. Baltimore Sun. With SUBSCRIPTION BATES One Year, in Advance Six Month, in Advance. r 0 0 W00DH0USE & BECKSTEAD, GARAGE, Machine and Blacksmith HORSESHOEING Shop .. Tubes Repaired by the Steam Vulcanizing Method. Expert Automobile Repairing. fcBaHX2X:X3S5!;S.r27,BftXlt;BESHEMKSieuaMqEHMIHli 000000X'0 O O SCC Ov O CKV CkX oooooooo THE OIL GAME Princes and Paupers Produced Ventures. by Oil and Wildcat Companies A HISTORY OF GUSHERS Promoters Tricks Exposed Geology vs. Experience This phamplet 10c THE OIL INSPECTION COMPANY, 2403 Elysian Street, Houston, Texas. ckxkoooooooxooxoxoxxxk fail. e ITS FACTS AND FALLACIES Wildcat Wells nothing public sentiment Without public sentiment nothing can succeed. Consequently he who moulds public sentiment goes deeper than ne who enacts statutes Abraham decisions. or promotes Lincoln. Tho passage of senate bills, Nos. 46 and 35 by tho last legislature for the regulating of tho practice of medicine and the treatment of human and for the creation of ailments, a department of registration respectively, or ports of the two bills havhas ing to do with drugless healers, been and will be tnc subject of much discussion and bitterness until fair and clean laws will have taken their Instead of helping matters, place. the medical men will find they have jumped from the frying pan into the fire. the These laws were passed at special request and instigation of the medical fraternity, as a 'perusal of The only their contents will show. forco at work for their passage was who were asked a few educators by the medical doctors to speak in The public did not retheir favor. On quest or work for their passage. the conrtary, the labor organizations from Ogden, representing 4,000 citizens,, and organizations in Salt Lake, representing that many more people, went on record as opposed to the it discriminated mensnre, in that against tho chiropractors, the doctor of their choice. Under tho new law-- (No. 46,) the educational qualifications do prohibit the present practicing chiropractors from obtaining a license, in that there is no school of chiropractic which is deemed to bo in good standing, as are below their present standards those required; consequently the grad nates of those schools arc not elThere Is igible- for examination. not a chiropractor in Utah who is allowed legnlly to take an examinaso tion. The medical politicians arranged it nnd so misled the legisla ture that no chiropractor could get It is just their way of a license. eliminating competition. And again they have another workable lever in bill No. 35, section 3, under F, which has to do with the registering, examining and licensing The law of medical practitioners. reads: For tho medical practitioners, the practitioners of obstetrics, the practitioners of obsteopnthy and the pracor titioners of any other system method of treating human ailments, five (5) persons, each one of whom shall be a licensed practitioner of medicine in this state and a graduate of a legally chartered medical school and in good standing, provided that for the purpose of preparing questions nnd rating papers of practice peculiar to any school, graduates of which may be candidates for The director registration or license. shall designnto additional or other examiners whenever occasion requires. Now, even if ft chiropractor was illegally allowed to take an examination, the five (5) medical men examine him in nil subjects except palpation and adjusting, it does not take very much intellect or experience to know that no medical man is going to examine a chiropractor and pass him. Especially those kinds of iodcial men who are usually at the examining port, who are politicians for their society. Yes, the law provides for all fads, nnd euds, as our friends term them, by attempting to put them out of business. Further, every M. D. now practicing in the state gets a license without nn examination, while every D. C. now- practicing in the state, no matter what his or her schooling or how long they have been practicing, is required to tako the examinations. And so do all men stand equal before it! Is the public clamoring for protection from the D. C., or is it the M. D. who needs the protection! The proposition of putting chiropractors under (his medical board is so manifestly unfair that it would argument. hardly seem worthy of The mere fact that separate board of examiners has never been granted in Utah, is no argument against its states in Twenty-onlining done. the union recognize chiropractic by having granted straight chiropractic The attempt of the phyboards. sician to kill competition through legislation is Primarily the physicians who hold control of this board are not educated or trained a chiropractors, and would be ns unfit to determine the proficiency of the chiropractors as the latter would be to determine the Furthproficiency of the physician. ermore, we are dealing with twX health systems which are competitive in the and diamentricnlly opposed premise upon which each is founded. The result would not bo anything but ft bitter prejudice which would shortly exterminate the chiropractor in the date where a majority of tho population looks upon them with favor. can the public The M. Ds. msK, for its own snfty, allow men to treat the sick who are unable to correctly Dr. Cabot of recognize disease! diagnostician, Boston, the American with a worldwide reputation, says he is mistaken in 48 per cent of bis can I a UTAH, MAY 20, 1921. with Now if Dr. Cabo diagnoses. '1 his experience, and with every aid that money and his science can supply is able only to correctly recognize disease in 52 per cent of his cases, what about other doctors! In tho last analysis, knowledge must be measured by results rather than bv the number of hours, or the pre liminary education 8icnt in acquiring it. Tho chiropractors are not asking tho state to license anyone who has been in school but six months. The chiropractic bill that the medical buns killed at the last legislature, called for a three year course, of six months in a recognized chiropractic each, college, which is all that is necessary in order to give chiropractic adjustments, intelligently and effectively. In concluding, one doctor says, let them enter by the gate into the fold. This statement is so hypocritical that its really fiinny. What he meant was, let the ehiroprators enter through the gate of the county And he proves this by his jail. Inst statement, as for the state it should enforce the law that the benefits. public may enjoy its was, Again what he really meant that tho M. D. may enjoy its bene fits. The physician may succeed in putting chiropractors in jail, but he will never succeed in stopping people from if getting chiropractic adjustments they w'ant them, ns new chiropractor will come in as fast a needed. The only way they can put the chiropractor out of business is to cure their own patients. Yours for health, T. C. JEPPSON, D. C. PH. C. Dr. Elizabeth It. Enrly has submitted the following in support of the Meriam Rubin case so much in dispute: In contravention of the stories circulated charging Dr. Paul O. Berger w ith failure in the ease of Meriam Itubin, suffering of talking sickI am offering the following ness, affidavit of her father: Waukegen, 111., March 19, 1921. To whom it may concern: My attention has been called to several conflicting statments that have recently been published in ilarious newspapers and journals regarding the saecessful handling by Dr. Paul O. Berger of the case of talking sickness suffered by my daughter, Mer-inRubin of Waukegen, 111. Now in order that the absolute truth be known, I hereby answer the following questions which seem to be the cause of dispute: Was the child given up by the Yes, specialist on the ease! Did the child show improvement while under the chiropractors care! Yes. Did the chiropractor, or his adjustments, injure the childs spine! Don t know. Has Dr. Paul O. Berger been discharged from the case as of this No. lute? Did you or your wife, Mrs. A. M. Rabin, give the specialists or medical men who were first on tne ease, a 'signed statement, or affidavit, to the effect that the success of the case No. was duo to their treatment! Witness: J. L. JOEHIRE, ' A. M.RUBIN' Father of Meriam Rubin of Waukegen, 111. Subscribed to before the undersigned this 19th day of March, 1921 at Waukegan, Illinois. T. ELMER HITLSU, Notary Public. My commission expires August 24, .. 1921. HELPFUL From WORDS a Payson Citizen. ertion! Is there a soreness in the kidney neys. kid- is danger in delay. Weak kidneys get weaker fast. ' Give your trouble prompt attention. Doans Kidney Pills are for weak kidneys. Your neighbors use nnd recommend them. Ask your neighbor. Read this Pnvson testimony. Mrs. Enoek Monk, Second WaTd, I keep iDoans Payson, svs: Kidney Pills in my home and have When my groat faith in them. kidneys become inactive or my back ts weak and lame, I use Doans Kid They alwnys give the aey Pills. same good results. Dont Price 69c, at all dealers. limply- ask for a kidnev remedy get Doan s Kidney Pills tho. same that Foster-MilburMonk had. Mrs. Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. If FOR MEN We offer new furnishings that mean real economy to the particular buyer. Reasonable prices for good quality. shapes and colors now in priced from $2.00 to$4.00 CapsFor men and boys at $1.00 to Hats-Ne- w $2.25 Shirts-Hig- h grade madras dress shirts in fast colors at $1.35 to $2.95 Work Shirts 75c $1.00 and $1.25 Ties50c, $1.00 $1.50 FARMERS MERC. COOP. kooooocooooooooooxxxoxxoo-ooooxAt 11 a. m. should be fed green The green cut bone or buttermilk. bone should be given about twice i week and on the other days milk turds. At 3 p. m. feed another lot of greens oats, sprouts, lettuce, etc. At 5 p. m. the chicks should get all the grain they can clean up, composed cracked wheat, of steel cut oats. trucked corn, used at our The masli hoppers establishment, are open all day, and we are feeding at present, (April 12) acommercial mash. At other times we mix equal parts of bran, oats, chop, cornnieal, and white middlings, and add 10 per cent of beef scraps. We We have use sand for litter. White Leghorn broilers 7 weeks old that weigh almost 1 pound fed on the We have endeavored above schedule. to cover a wide scope as briefly as and believe we have cited IMissible, the most flagrant causes of the high mortality in youngsters passing from the two weeks limit into the broiler stage. Keep the Young Chicks Growing It is presumed that during this month you have your chicks hatched nnd a start of several weeks growth. Tho fact should be impressed that you must keep your youngsters growing. They should not be allowTed to beeven for a day. Folcome 'stunted lowing are a few of the more comretarded growth. mon causes of It should Overheating or chilling. be remembered that when your chicks pass over the two weeks age limit they are shedding the down and takNo mistake should ing on feathers. be made in imagining that the youngster can do without heat at night, because it is shooting itg feathers. A temperature of 75 degrees to 90 degrees must be maintained in a properly ventilated brooder or they will crowd, and the result will be dead and leg weakness, diarrhea so there one-thir- one-thir- one-thir- vhick. Fidos Chicks can be killed just as quickly by overheating.' Overfeeding takes its toll in morThe youngster will not eat tality. too much, but the feed in excess of fvhat it consumes lies around, sours, and either ferments or becomes musty and stale. Invariably chickens will seek out some forbidden diet. If musty feed is near, they will bo sure to eat some and then your trouble It is believed that the begins. only rulo to follow in feeding is to give them as much as they will disThis does pose of iji half an hour. not apply to dry mash, as this should be before the chick all the time. , The following feeding schedule fori youngsters is offered for the benefit! of our readers: Fresh water in all fountains before chicks are awake in the morning. To each quart of drinking water should .5 be added one tablespoonful of lime water. First feed: Oats, sprouts, or let tuce at about 7:30 a- - m. Is your back lame and painful! Does it ache especinly after ex- region! These symptoms suggest weak 0000000000000000000000 ooooooooox , S Tip. The man getting his hair cut noticed dog, which was floor besides the chair, on the lying that the barbers had his eyes fixt on his master at said the Nice dog that, work. customer. He is, sir. He seems very fond of watching you cut hair. It aint that, sir, explained the You see, . sometimes barber. I make a mistake and snip off a little The Chrisbit of a cuctomers ear. tian Advocate (New York.) Snatched as a Brand- - i Dr. Mott, says the palpably an-- ? had intended to tiiegal Yale News, take up the study of law, but hi Y. M. C. A. work, while a student at Cornell, influenced him to follow Christian pursuits.Quoted by F. I. A., in the New York Tribune. oooooxxxc ooooooooooooooooooooooooo Price Reduction 490 Touring - NOTICE , OF POUNDKEEPERS SALE. Notice is herbby given that I have described impounded the follow-inanimal: one hay horse, white star in forehead nnd branded with Oscar Hartmans brand lazy T and U with Has broad wings to the latter. small wire cut above righ forefoot. Age about nine years. Unless tho said animal is claimed and all charges paid by or before Mav 26, this animal will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder at the city estray pound. Pale to take place at 6 oclock, p. m., on that day. ,T. A. BETTP, City Poundkeeper. Reduced from $984.00 to $800.00 The Same Perfect Car L. KNOWLES MOTOR CO. Payson, Utah. XX0CKX0XXXXX000 |