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Show THE PAYSOMAX. 1 VOLUME m Mila ip4 I UTAH nlTnl W of the Payson High BchooL Written an (1 Edited hv the Students RAYSON, PAYSON, M i MRIL 1, nim mer 1021. in. days, ing ii. women who rt i n tc rot SOPHOMORE REPORT cultural work. Friday mpl, win, a big meeting at the Tab .. W-baernio Saturday the wnmen will! The sophomores .he from won Monday. in juniors Health, be given a lecture on v an a good pttmo nml of courso w, th First ward church. Me hope Hnivfrsitr of were alj exporting to w.n, Friday, April l, the ,.r,)W,( nut to our in tin a will program Utah give given in the dance Friday night high school. assured a All are gymnasium. music. we good as have very time AND ATHLETICS, BASEBALL Tt oalv 35 cents per couple and 1." cents for extra ladies, so every inv sart saving vmir nickels. With the advent of spring cruo Every that of track and baseball. Can You Imagine It? night now thc campus is filled with men cavorting around in abbreviated Velma Harris with nothing to say. them garb hoping thus to enable Erlftndson acting frovolous. Thelma selves to lmng up n worlds record without his know from And Johnson T.owoll famous. and so become not H air. nil th0 Ieohs of things it would bo aurprising if something of the Ray Hansen ns ;l public sjimkor. sort did happen. without Agent T.iiwrence Clayso,, Wo lift vo received an invitation to Jensen. attend a relay meet at. Spanish Fork Naomi Ellsworth not talking with We nre certainly going on April 8. the boys or tn'king about her dates. to make Spanish Fork sorry tin? Laura without rouge. ever invited us. Miss Prouse acting grown up. This activity is not confined alone The class series in base-bnlto track. Coni without her screech. is well nnder way, the sophs Donna studying. 5 to 1 in winning from the juniors, Sliennor ringing tho bell on Miss schedbaseball The tho first gamo. t ime. ule for this division starts April Mas Perry skinny. 12. With all this work ahead it is Albert Woods not brngging nbout no wonder that every one is bnsv. himself. dolled up. I Earnest Hanson . Miss Shaw smiling. A interesting program was given reasonable. n v. las. t the -loim Wil,, with a family. representing Wightman, with Mr. dancing council upofco to stwVnts mainline! rcslutin Tlio I'mnrovomotit Miss Shepherd dancing the dummy Tt was class put on its prognim. R J inthe fonn of a negro carnival. All." enjoyed the program. Mitfori, Vnnoo in (J.iaylo Dixons t,,, East Thursday, the dramatics club Mrs. Temples rehearsed its plav, Second in the ward Telegram, the amusement hall. Following rehearsal Max Iecrv entertained at The play will be given tl supper. 16 at the Second ward 1" and April amusement, hall. Hov. How often does your kill a man? Conductor. Just. once. One He on Everybody! lookout for tbe big senior lion, it is to be tbe greatest event of tbe season nnd pverv one who would like to have a Toni good time once more, be sure and come. When and where nnd other details will be given later. Preside girl, enterting store Jfow cent cans of nuch nre your 1e milk? Clerk. Three for a quarter. Shy. 1882 I multitude of witnesses, was for the aged mother, who, In a forest hut, had started him on his way to the White Ivory Does Not Rust. held a place of honor House and One cold afternoon sever il schoolgirls were standing on a eo ner wait- beside the schoolmate sweetheart who ing for a car. A man Invited them had been his faithful companion all to come Into his office to wait for the along the road. ear. They accepted. The conversation One thing though lackest yet, and soon turned to the color of a certain that Is a slight ossification of the girls hair. One insisted It was red, heart, John Hay had written to the another that It was auburn, and an- president-elec- t This lack was fatal. other that It was brown. Had his heart been harder, Garfield At the height of the discussion two children entered the odice. As soon as they understood the nature of the argument, one of the youngsters cx- claimed: Oh. shucks! ller hair aint red. Indianapolis News. Ivory dont rust. Great California Industry. Nearly a million acres are planted Air. Johnson with a haircut. to the fruit trees that supply the canDee Harnett with her hair combed. neries of California, according to Elton It. Sliniv In nil article In the Old ColHazel Douglas without her ony Magazine, the organ of the Old tell us that Edith Hills getting to school on Colony club. Statistic of the 100,000,000 acres of laud In the time. fMKi.OOO are Dorothy Knowles getting a new state of California, about devii'ed to fruit trees; so it Is easily beau. Hlanrhe Melteth without Leonard. conceivable that the is no small part of the general Jerome getting excited. Industrial activities of the Golden Dick Reece getting fat. State.'' Thorn without her hair curled. yellow-sweate- fruit-cunnin- g Spreading Manure , SllVI VJERSA.L. TRACTOR, Jf'iV ..Vp.V A-- 5 And to meet the demand of the farmer The Price is Now Loading IxJ ffarvQstn Jr 5 x. a yf J ir ' j i ?rr : Reduced $250 .1 'atf-pA 0- - . v iVO flay t WOMANS COUNTRY A VAST EMPIRE IN SOUTH SEAS English Writer Givis an Interesting Impression of Her Sister Over the Seas. Extent of Australasian Group Under British Rule Is Hardly Realized by Americans. who went As an English woman about America for nearly three years, making friends, Last, West, South and North. I ought to be able to contrast tbe women of tbe two countries, but the mote one travels the more one realizes that folks is just folks all the Juilsou C. Wellivor writes In the Country Magazine that our impies-sionabout the Australasian empire of the future are rather vague, because we are unable to realize its mere bigness. Thus the island of New Guinea, the greatest island in the world, if we classify Australia as a continent, was, before the war. divided between the British. Dutch and The British have now taken over. In the name of Australia, the German claims. We think of New Guinea as a considerable (latch of dry land In the expanse of the southern ocean, hut have difficulty realizing that if it could he laid down on the United Stales, one end would he at Portland. Me., the other near Omaha, and that It would blot tint an area about twice the size of the German empire, nnd including something like a quarter of the population of these United States. It contains vastly greater resources than Goro- my. also about a thousand white people and fkK),OOQ nhorigines. largely cannibals. Half of it yet remains Dutch, hut Its predestination to be essentially British is quite obvious. Australasia aims at leadership iri the south temperate zone, on lines curiously parallel to those by which Great Britain has become leader In the With Inexhaustible coil' and North. Iron, she Is creating Iron and stol and shipbuilding Industries and a navy of her own. The war era lias heca marked y the completion of Australia's first transcontinental railroad, suggestive reminder of the beginning of our own Un'on Pacific. world over. Amerienn women are quicker at the uptake as regards friendliness and Engkindnesses; hut tbe tongue-tielish do just as miicli in the long run. The Americans nmnpers are more cosmopolitan, her clothes are lietter put on, she has more good stories in r her speeches. But if you compare corresponding types as most travelers omit to do tliey are both (he situte color under their skin. America Is a womans country. The hoy belongs to his mother, nnd most women give their own opinions on all subjects quite curiously well expressed without any suggestion of having gone to a man for help. The Englishwoman speaks more shortly and with a suggestion of having asked her husband at home; hut I doubt if the Englishwoman is worse off, since England is the home of the proverb, As the good man saith, so say we; hut as the good wife saith so must it he. One very noticeable clmnn In the American woman is her quickness in starting conversation with a stranger and her aptness in saying something pleasant at once. I cannot help thinking that if English nurseries and school rooms taught this, it would have widely international results and put more reality into the League of Nations. Lucy II. M. Soulsby In the Womans Supplement of the London Times. d after-dinne- Photography ICO Years Old. Tills is the centenarv of photography. So rapidly does the world progress, so essentul a part of our civilization has become the taking of niet urea, that It is difficult to realize that the art was unknown when Monroe first entered the White House. Yet in 1820 Niepce, first of all men, succeeded in producing what might he called a photograph, a rude Impression on a silver (date rendered sensitive by a layer of asphaltum saturated with oil of lavender. And though this discovery awakened world-widinterest at the time, this method could not he put into general use, and not until 1S.!9 did Daguerre succeed in producing the first practical photograph. After that date the art advanced rapidly, so rapidly, in fact, that before 1850 the daguerreotype w as common in every village, in every family. From the silver plates of Niepce to the motion picture of today is a lo:e- - step, a step vvh'ieh hut Illustrates rapidity with which modern cvT. .,tma s tier-man- Mt. Washington 6,293 Feet High. Many persons believe that Mount Washington, In New Hampshire, is the highest mountain in tin on tern part of the United States. M.mm Washington stands 0,203 feet above sea level, acceding to the United States geological survey, department of the Interior, but many peaks In the southern Appalachians are several hundred feet higher than New Hampshire s famous mountain. The highest mountain in the Appalachian system the highest point in the United Slates east of the Rockies is Mount Mitchell, in North Carolina, which stands at an elevation of (i.711 feet. The highest mountain in Tennessee, Mount Guyot, stands 6,030 feet n.'mve sen level. e a chew or THERE'S W0M EVERY DAY ON ANY FARM Cultivating Com o March 4, James A. Gar20th field, inaugurated president, aged fifty. Mar. 23, sent to senate the nomination of federal officers in New York City. May 16, the senate confirmed the nominations. May 17, Senators Conk-linand Platt resigned. July 2, Garfield shot by Charles J. Guiteau at Washington. to Removed Sept. 6. Elberon N,. J., Sept. 19, died, aged fifty. June 30, Guiteau hanged. Ill 11 ney there! 1881 F., on fishing frip.iHov-- s tho boat is sinking. Ts there anyone A. GARFIELD fell a here who knows how to pray? JAMES the spirit of faction and of eagerlv, I do. T.erny ,T Brown. All right you prav and tho spoils system. Although this genthe rest of us will put on the life tle, kindly man was not of the heroic stuff that martyrs are made of, his belts. Were one shy. blood became the seed of better things His friend. Nice day lei s take In our politics. a trip to the zoo. Itnrely if ever has a president taken Himself No (hanks, stay at up the burden of the otl'me with a larghome. My eldest, daughter does (he er measure of good will from the peofo't.rot; my second daughter talks ple, regardless of party and of faclike a parrot; my son laughs like a tion, than flowed out to Garfield as he hyena; my wife is ns cross as a stood on the steps of the capitol In bear nnd my mother in law says I the sunshine of his inaugural day, the When I go any- picture of robust American manhood am an eld gorilla. where T want a change. White and In Its prime. Ills first kiss, after kissHliie. ing the Bible In the presence of a J- Iick Fnirbtinka without M, rtan.) OF GARFIELD - line Dick j ehthes. 0. by Janc-- a g l SENIORS 19 0 JOKES ' track W . ASSASSINATION DRAMATICS JUNIORS this week. "V Fridav and Saturday, April 1 and ill game The with 2 the "farmers in he score was I the to' are wi'h jumo.s, club, Commercial the Parson favor. Meeting, 5 to 1 in the sophomores Up. give a' Round start that isnt good very dur school Juniors, the held high at wifi be time. next do am! better nan Iho for the two (Pets 1 Five Minute Chats on Our Presidents Dy JAMES MORGAN havent nmrh to sny copies won the u. THIS (Copyrli,-lit- ROUND UP : UTAn, APRIL 1, 1921. W. L. REYNOLDS CO. Payson, Utah CLASSIFIED COLUMN Advertisements in this column inserted at the rate of 10 cents per Count six line each insertion. words to the line. Lucretia R. Garfield. would have made his administration wholly his own, lifting it above factions, and he might have lived through a prosperous term. Instead, he re- mained his few months in the White House what he had been In congress, a lieutenant of Blaine, whom lie appointed to the secretaryship of state with the love of a comradeship of and who became at eighteen years once the power behind the throne. The only president to step directly from the capitol to the White House, ho was without executive experience or tastes. Ilis whole training had been to debate and compromise, not to act or decide on his sole responsibility. Garfield himself was rather Indifferent to factions, liking to get along with all pien. He appreciated Conkltngs relucttjnt hut timely support in the campaign and invited him out to Menr tor in the winter to talk over the New York patronage. He thought of Inviting him into the cabinet Itself, until Blaine whispered no. Less than three weeks after he toek hw seat, Garfield told the senator that r the he was not yet ready to New York ofthe of filling question fices. Only 48 hours afterward, he filled them, nominating for the highest of those offices Blaines best friend nnd Conklings worst enemy in New York. With Garfield's hand, Blaine had thrown down the gauntlet to the haughty chieftain of the Stalwart clan and a duel of factions was on in The administration sucblind fury. ceeded in heating Conkiing in the senate, where he opposed the confirmation of the offensive nominee. But the enator and his- colleague, Thomas C. Platt, resigned their seats and appealed to the New York legislature to reelect them as a vindication of their course. When the conflict was bitterest and were losing at when the Stalwarts Albany, a disappointed place hunter at Washington, Charles J. Guiteau, conceived the mad Idea of saving the situation with a pistol shot, and he posted himself at the railway station, where his victim was to take a train for Massachusetts. The president was going back to Williams college, the goal of his struggling youth, and was smiling like a hoy off for a vacation as he entered the waiting room at the railway station with Blaine at his side. In two flashes of a revolver he felL con-dde- FOR SALE.- One of the Best Busi78 feet ness Corners in Payson, in Depth, feet Frontage. Ill t with right of way in th - 3-- - rear. Property embraces three business houses and Modern Residence, except furnace. Inquire at Payson ian Office. FOR SALE. My home on Utah avenTerm will be ar ue, Payson. Kenneth J. Tanker. ranged. 24-tf.- e We will pay the best price for old cotton rags. color. Must bo clean and any Baysonian Bring in your rags. HAGS WANTED. Taxes of the Nations. The tax burden in important countries was computed for tin financial Exconference held at Brussels. pressed in dollars at t lie rate of exchange current in Hie slimmer, the Nations Business stales, it is shown that per capita the United Kingdom (lays the highest taxes of $N7.!I; the United St.ates is second, with $50.01; France, third, with $31.00; and Norway. fourth, with SgS.Sli. With the income per capita, the economists compared the present government revenue of the latter to the former which comes nearest to showing the relative burdens of taxes today Is lowest in the United States at 8 per cent nnd highest in the United Kingdom at 27 per cent. The other countries come In between. The Cooties. Colonel Roosevelt told a war story at an Albany reception. A doughboy," he said, lmd just got hack home from the war, nnd he was lunching in a cafeteria when a dear old lady in the next clmir to his own leaned over across her pie and said: I. too, have a soldier son, young man, and a lucky one at that. Would you believe it? My boy went through the war without a scratch. Gee, lady, said the doughboy, spill us the name of his insect powder will ye? " office. block FOR SALE. One Reasonable west of Tabernacle. Elmer terms. price and good f c Smith, Pavson. HOME 11-tt- With PART OF my lot for sale. or without buildings, also a barn. J. G. Hanson. , WANTED. Wanted to hear owner of farm or good land for sale worth the priee asked. EARLY & EARLY, Doctors of Chiropractic, Over Wightman 8upply Company, Main Street. Office Hours from 13 to 1 and 2 to 6. FARM fro-- n L. .Tones, Box 551, Olnoy, 111. LOST. Wednesday between night T. II. Wilson residence and E. brown Mendenhall residence, a wool Finder Inprobe. notify Oeorgo F Wilson and receive re- G. F. TILSON. M. D. PHYSICIAN and Sl'IUiwM Office tfvtn Street at Residence Phone Payson, Utah ward. FOR ONE GOOD WORK IIORSE SAFE. Byron Mendenhall, Thone 112-J-4- FOR G. . 4-- SALE. Two fresh milch Schacrrcr, Pavson. cows. A. FOR range. DR. J. H. ELLSWORTH DENTIST over Bank, Payson, Ut. Office Hours, 9 to 12; 1 to 6 Phone 23. Res. Phone 103-- J Lmmfa c second-hanSAFE. Good Inquire Shuler Motor 18-t- f Co. e SALE. My home. Sco J. A. Loveless for further information. E. II. rulvor. DR. L. N. ELLSWORTH DENTIST FOR Office, Pay gen Exchange Savings 25-tf-- c Bank Building. FOR RENT CHEAP. 80 acres of and good land wilh good house all necessary out buildings. acres in alfalfa. Inquire at office. 25 Pay-sonia- DR. L. D. PFOUTS 25-lt-- DENTIST SAFE. Weber wagon with tires, good as new. Also Beet box and grovel planks. $200 takes all. Kenneth J. Tanner, Payson. FOR Over Wightman Supply Company, Main Street. 9 to 1 and 2 to 6. Saturdays, 9 to 1 Only. Office Phone 13. Reg. Phone 80 Office nours H . |