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Show TILE PAYSONTAN. PAYSOX, PAGE 6 UTAH NEWS REVIEW CHILD SAVING Five Minute Chats on Our Presidents Price Is to have a municipal band according to action taken by the city week. council (Tubs and fraternal orders of Ogden have joined in a movement to hold another Near Hast relief dinner at $10 a plate. A number of citizens of Provo mot last with the county coininlHsloiiers week to dlseu-.- s plans for the establishment of a county hospital. Reports from the canyons in the east for the mountains, the watersheds Gunnison valley, are to the effect thut some ten feet of snow ure now packed at the heads of the canyons. The destruction of the Price city hall was averted one day last week and efonly by the prompt fective work of the Price fire department. The blaze caused damage estimated at $11MNI. Plans are under way and are being farm supported by the Guiiriisoi bureau, the citizens of Gunnison and g the Immediate vicinity towards the boys of the high school with thoroughbred stock. The annual wholesale trades excursion of the Salt Lake commercial club will leave for points In Nevada on May 8, the trip to consume about one week, according to a decision made by the executive board. Using a large spoon, with which she removed the screws from a transom over the door In the woman's ward at the county Jail, Helen Ilrewer, 15 years of age, of Preston, Idaho, made her escape from the jail at Ogden. Federal agents of the Salt Lake office of the department of Justice have placed under arrest two men and a woman accused of removing three Salt Lake girls to Ely, Nev., on November 1. 1020, in violation of the Mann act. Four kegs of whisky were confiscated by federal and police officers In a laundry wagon ut Salt Lake, believed by the police to have been a "transfer wagon for liquor. Four men were arrested In connection with the affair. . Rr.vunt ( Jensen, alleged army deserter, from Salt I.ake City, was by the federal grand jury at San Francisco on charges of Impersonating a secret service officer and of obta'nlng money by false pretenses by that means. Edward I. Larsen, who claims to he a graduate of the Utah law school with i lie class of lilt I mid says he ones held public office In Utah, Is under arrest at Sail Francisco n reused of defrauding large downtown hotels with worthless checks. The Millard County Telegraph & Telephone company return shows property hi Millard and Juab counties valued at $0570 and the report of the People's Telephone company shows property In .Willard mul Juab counties valued at $1.!,!07. Robert M. Cannon of Salt Lake mid Clu'sle.v Gunderson of Price tied for first place In the competitive examination held at Salt Luke for the selection of an appointee to West Point. Second honors were awarded to Iloyd Guthrie of Salt Lake. Price will have a new fire station, if plans already drawn are approved. The building will be 2.lx54 feet mid equipped with modern appliances for handling hose mid u suitable place for he auto engine. Sleeping quarters for lit men also will he provided. An effort Is being made by the roads committees of the Logan commercial dill) and other organizations Interested in good roads to have the federal and Hate highway commissions authorize work on the mails as soon ns possible, In order to give work to the unemployed. Miss Vera Peterson, a stenographer, a naiive of I'tah and a former resident of Suit Lake, mid a man Identified by tic police as Dr. Carlos Williams, address unknown, were found shot to dentil in an apartment at San Francisco Williams had shot the girl and then killed himself. J. Mint is under arrest at Provo, charged wttli having suggested that another person falsely swear to having killed seventy-oncoyotes, one mountain lion and five wihhnts In Juab comity ill order to receive the bounty. It is stated that the animals upon which ihe homily was paid were killed in Nevada. Prof. John J, McClellan, organist of the la iermicle at Salt Lake, has heell oiated and made a member of the Older of the Crown" by King Albert f lb1.- - mu iu recognition of Mr. Me-Tbin's playing of the tabernacle organ for the Relgian monarch and his pieen. Elizabeth, upon the occasion of heir visit to Sait Lake two years ago. Announcement is made that const ruction will begin at mice on the two last nUs of tile main county trunk road west from Vernal to ll.tyden. lock blast, ng is to begin on the otseslioe dngwa.v just west of Ver-lal- , and construction on the Uintah river bridge north of Leeton is to eg n. Smoke from railroad terminals in Salt Lake will be reduced by half, in (lie opinion of the smoke Inspector, ns t result of agreements by the Oregon Short Line railroad, the Salt Lake Route and the Denver & Rio Grande laitrond to employ smoke inspectors. It Is claimed that the Carbon eounty Tinners have built a warehouse at Price and established a rles agency, only to II ml the shippers of the Uintah basin ming onto the market with truck-id- s of pork, etc., to sell at whatever .'.nee price they mnv get. li'.'O, (Coprlght, by Morgan.) THE SECOND HARRISON 1833 August 20, Bonjamln Harrison, bom at North Bend, 1852 Graduated from Miami Ohio. 1861-6- lege, Ohio. Colonel 5 col- and brevetted general In the brigadier Civil war. In tt e United States senate. 1888 Elected president. 1880 March 4, Inaugurated the twenty third president, at the age of fifty-five- . 180? Defeated for March 13, death of Ben1901 jamin Harrison at Indianapolis, aged sixty-seve1381-- e iiaiuusonS Benjamin to be only an between the two acts of the Cleveland drama. History gives but n uenee at the one president wleee pivdeiesf.ur In tune his successor, who had to ttlve up the presidential chair to the man he took It from. Although llarrlson hnd more brains than Cleveland, Cleveland had a larger nature, and that Is what counts most In the leadership of men. Notwithstanding Itenjamln Harrison vviih the grandson of a president. In whose house he was horn, Ids father was poor and the hoy was brought up plainly. Graduating from a small Ohio college, Harrison married at twenty the girl to whom he engaged himself at eighteen, and they wont to housekeepcottage tn ing Pi a little It, Indianapolis He was not admitted to the l.ar until alter tils marriage, and the first mom lie ever made was as a court r'er at $2.7t a day. Later on lie helped out ids lean practice with his salarv as elerk of the supreme court of the state. Then came the Civil war, in winch lie served gallantly as a e doiiel and marched with Slier- iee-roo- & el - tosiijJimn Harrison, man to the s a. Afterward he rose to a high and prosperous rank in the praefice of law. The ntdv p blind ot'iee Harrison ove bi'd beiere his eleetlon to the was n vest in the senate. pro- - .'on-H to that body for In it i vi ar ! fore tie whs elected pres-M-. wi'h no ..,f p.fi ',i,,i liimiot Hot he would soon return ns lut- - i.'ee1 e'cet, mill lm fnuiblv 'e d a -- o'f as "a dead duck. 'be o'lv de--- T c.tndhbuo that the rank ..in iP. of Mm fepublleans wanted to m I'hn.ue in I'AS v'as IPaine. Hut he was not v , ip mid he refused to make .. cemes" f..- ie nomlnatton. At last r n- - s,.t!imd: U Take Har-A r the e.uiveiiMon Indiffer- I i ' I'l '! K'O' I . eveiMs of the HarM. Ktntey a - C'e tar d file silver net. wtiud. more fan ih.iiMed i tie pureb is . of jj,at b. Urn irea-iirl' o'. the Sherman law or. the suhjeet of trusts; the dependent p. listen iu t, and the first congress hardly belong in tt.is li.tlo Mory, because none of them oitgnaied with the president himself. He did not rise to leadership, and congress took the reins. All the while he sat in the Wld'e House In cold aloof- ris II . Ml I . t - s y; u ness. With the cry of Coul help the surplus'." the Republicans gave the country In Harrison's ndniin'stnitlon the first ,bl"ioii-do"a- r congioss, the for the two war term risdent, d total. To ing to that mi the popular plo ts' Speaker Reed recountorted: Tills is a bllpon-dnlla- r try.", Rut the cm ntrv did not feel rich enough to t".v be higher tariff rates of the M Kinlt m t That law was passed only seven weeks before the congressional elections In 181)0. Of v urse anyone who had quythjng.to sell seized upon the The shep-p!i,- ennse to mark up pri woaieu rose tn their fury at the Mgler cost of living, and the voters ovorw.he'me.l the Republtean majority iu the house. That v.h the forerunner of a sCi! l greeter oi.'ical overturn in the election In IV'2, when Harrison went down under a swooping di torv for Cieiidaiiti. piesi-(icntia- lx. I e . el unor-mlze- d W01 IN ARMENIA TOLD at By JAMES MORGAN UTAH, FEBRUARY 25, 1921. BY AN AMERICAN Charles V. Vickrey Gives Facts of Near East Relief Pro- oeoae o00000000 DOQQOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOO s 0 1 J o gram for Orphans. Charles V. Vickrey, general secretary of the Near East Relief, has returned from a trip of Inspection throughout Central Euroiteyid the Near East, and made a report to the trustees of the Near East Relief tn which he covers In detail the actual work of child saving now being conducted by the great American relief organization In the Near East. Mr. Vickrey believes that a few millions Of dollars wisely expended at this time In the education of the children of the Near Eust, In character building and In moulding these young lives, will be worth vastly more to the world o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o Talk Optimism and Boost Business te $ h 1 . y V i The Paysonian Publishing Company EwNmwMMW, CHARLES V. VICKREY. than billions of dollars spent later In suppressing International warfare and strife." Mr. Vickrey considers the need In the Near East and especially In Armenia greater than anywhere else In the world, because, as he says, In the countries of Central Europe there are going governments which have merely been temporarily Impoverished by war. In the Near Eust, on the other hand, there Is no such thing as stable government. The whole fabric of the stnte has to be created from the beginning, and the Innocent and helpless children have to be trained to t lie responsibilities of future citizenship. Peace In the Near East and, in great measure, throughout the world, will deeud very largely on the character of the ettlzenshlp of the peoples of the Near Tlast." Irresistible Appeal of Orphans. Describing the orphanage work of the Near East Relief In the Armenian Republic, Mr. Vickrey said: We have at Alexandropol in t tie Caueusus, one orphanage where there are approximately 10,000 homeless or motherless, children, fatherless ninny of them having no known living relative. Some of them do not even know their own names. Or the place of their birth. They have shown vvouder-fu- l recuperative powers, and to see thorn play their kindergarten or other games under the direction of our American relief workers, one could never believe that they had pnssed through the years of suffering that most of them have experienced since they, or their parents, were driven from their homes In Central Turkey tive years ago. "For the accommodation of these orphans there are sixty splendid stone buildings, erected ns barracks fnt the Russian army. These buildings are now given to us by the Armenian government for a period of ten years and lend themselves admirably to rrlief purposes. "This orphanage at Alexandropol Is but one of the 220 orphanages that t lie Near East Relief ts now operating In various parts of the Caucasus, Anatos lia, Ctltcta, Syria and the area. Thirty miles from Alerandropot, at Kars, there Is another group of Russian army barracks, which were given us hy the Armenian government for relief purposes. I was going through the dormitories of this orphanage at Khts when the young American college girl In charge turned to me and said: Mr. Vickrey, It sometimes makes me feel Just a little older than Methuselah to he called "Mother" hy (1000 of those Armenian children. And that Is exactly wlmt site was the only mother that these 0 000 Ar menian children have, except ns she avails herself of the organized assistance of native Armenian women. In caring for this large family. In the hospital at Kars found 1,150 beds, which, the day I was there, were occupied by 1,208 patients, It frequently being necessary to put two or more children In a single bed. At Alpxandropol we have In one hospital, or group of hospital buildings, 1,500 trio liotua patients. At Karnklts, foit.v mill's east of Alexandropol we luive an orphanage devoted exclusively to the care and training of the blind children. At Delljan we have another orphanage, located on a mountain side for the care of tubercular children, this segregation being ns much for the welfare of the healthy children in the orphanages as for the care of the unfortunate consumptives At Erlvau we formerly laid twenty six distinct orphanages, though they have now been reduced and consolidated o seven In number. There are some-tli'nmore limn 0,000 orphans In the K'fciou of Harpout." Gonstanti-imple-Stralt- 1 o o o o o o o o o o o 9 O 0 o o o Q Q 0o o o Q o o 0 cgggoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo No Golf Thece? (Dont Crowd Gents! One at a Time umiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiimmiimm: Mrs. Veil Oven (an ardent spirit(From the Cleveland Plain Dealer.) 1 THE GIRL ON THE JOB Wanted A man who sincerely be- ualist " Since my old man died I lieves that if given the opportunity been have abl to have a chat with How to Succeed How to Get will make to I am " Ahead How to Make Good E put him togood.tost. Ask willing more is which than I had when for Miss him, I By JESSIE ROBERTS Hope, iniiiuiimiiiiimmmmmmmmntiimir XOW TIIE FOREWOMAN 314 Schofield building. alive that is, after he took London Opinion. up golf. he was Home Companion. I know a man that has been All Cleared Up. married years and he spends the war the forewomat all his thirty BEFORE evenings at home. He "You know I love you: will now she is what I call love." "Thats mg increasingly common In the great you marry me? "Oh, no; its paralysis. industries especially those that emShe But my dear boy, I refused ploy large numbers of girls. In some you only a week ago. of these plants, like that of the Artificial Limb company, women ajre admit- CLASSIFIED COLUMN He "Oh, was that you? London ted to the foreman training classes on Opinion. an equal footing with the men. inthis in Advertisements column There are two types of forewomen, serted at the rate of 10 eenta per vailed the instructional and theprodne-tional- . line each insertion. Count six Women who are working in words to the line. the plant are those who usually get DR. J. H. ELLSWORTH these appointments, and It Is an InFOR Busitho SALE. ot Best One DENTIST citement to women to go to work In ness Corners in layson, 05 co over Bank, Payson, Ut. these large Industrial establishments C'fflce Hours. feet in Depth, to 12; 1 to I Frontage, 111 'hat was lacking before. Phone 23. Res. Phone 10S-- J of with' in the way right One of the great questions for womrear. Proporty embraces three busien today Is thnt of equal opportunity. ness houses and Modern Residence, It runs hand in hand with the one except furuaee. Inquire at Payson that The fact concerning equal pay ian Office. hardly any big factory or mill employing women Is now without Its forewomFOR SALE. My home on Utah avenO. F. TILS0N.M .D. an shows that progress Is being made. Terms will be arPHYSICIAN and SLxvGkua ue, Payson. Kenneth J. Tanner. Every woman should work toward ranged. e these opportuni'ies for her Office at Residence $ 78-fe- 3-- 4 12-fo- S4-tf- sex. Many Industries ure employing more and more women in their regular work, especially factories where delicate work has to he done, such as the assembling of adding machines', electric Hpphances and the like. And women are gradually misting men from the NEWSPAPERS FOB SALE. For Fall houseeleaning get old newspapers for under yolr rugs or ear-peWarm and sanitary, in bundles of 100 at 25 eents per bundle. Paysonian Publishing Company. g Phone Payson, Utah t. HAY FOR SALE In the stack or betIndustry, delivered. Hugh Johnson Payson, ter is their ability to handle the minute parts used. The fact Is that the girl of nineteen or twenty has become the HOME FOR SALK One block west .of Tabernacle. typical watchmaker of the country. Reasonable Where the women have a chance to terms. Elmer- price and good Smith, Payson. prove themselves they are making good. They will get more chances and It seems likely that they will continue SEED WHEAT FOR SALE. Inquire Glen W. Cropper, Spring Lake. to make good. There Is a real future for the ambitious wwian In the industries of the eountrv P.dny. PART OF my lot for sale. With (Copyright) or without P. G. buildings. Figures Never Lie. Hanson. "What are the chances of my locovcriiig. doctor?" WANTED Building lot nbout 40 One hundred per cent. Medical feet front, close in. PayInquire records show that nine out of every sonian affice. p' ten die of the disease you have. Votirs is the tenth ease Ive treated. FOR SALE. Home ami two acres of Voure bound to Others all died. land, including cow, pigs chickens Statistics are statistics. household goods. A. L, Me and get well. The American Legion Weekly. Clellan, Payson. watch-nukin- Exln Street OLD h ELIZABETH R. EARLY, Chiropractor, Over Wightman Supply Company, Main Street Offioe Honrs from 10 to 1 and 2 to 6. 11-ttf- DR. L. N. ELLSWORTH DENTIST 18-2- t- Office, Payson Exchange Bsvlngs p 25-1- 5 i dr. l. d. pfouts DEHTXSX Ovor Wightman Supply Company Main Street Hours 9 to 1 aad 2 to Saturdays, 0 to 1 Only. Office Phone 13. Res. Phone 80 Office L f |