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Show T THS PAYBONAIN, THE PAYSOIlIAIi Entered at the Poet--0 111 ce at son as second claw matter. Pay- - Published every Thursday by the Paysonlan Publishing Company. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: One Tear, in advenes..-- Six Months, in advance - 12.00 1.00 LAWRENCE JORGENSON Editor and Manager. Copy for ads or notices will positively not be accepted later than 10 a. m. Wednesday morning. GUI Assecuia STATE WHAT NEXT? Under the caption of "Easy Existence of the Average Country Paper," the Elmore (Minn.) Eye in a recent edition editorially portrayed the editors viewpoint on the existing conditions and the need of reconstruction: "An invoice of our condition, following the recent and yet present strenuous tmes of war and reconstruction, discloses the fact that the newspapers are yet a great power for good despite the fact that we have been held up, held down, sand bagged, walked on, sat on, flattened out and squeezed first by the United States government for publicity for war tax, Liberty loan bonds, excess profits and income tax; for state, county and city highway tax; for auto tax and every other tax and syntax; and by every society and ormind of ganization that inventive man can invent to extract from the newspapers their stock in trade free for nothing; by the Society of John the Baptist, the G. A. R., the Womans Relief, the Mens Relief, Relief fos stomach ache; the Navy league, the Red Cross, the Iron Cross, the Double Cross, and every other cross of all colors, until a newspaper looks like a Maltese Cross; by the Y. M. C. A., the Old Folks home, the Childrens home, the Aid society and every hospital in the country. "The government has so governed our business that we do not know who owns it. We have been inspected, suspected, examined and C0BWEBS ing at her and her guests from the corners and little places. Cobwebs are regular little confessors silent though they be of neglect. Though you may be unable to see them, Cobwebs get Into peoples Brains. And they come there for the same reason that they come everywhere while nobody is around they come In. And they stay until cleared out. The Idle and listless and complaining are living examples of people where Brain Garrets are choked with Cobwebs. There is but one remedy for those whose Brains are Here It Is Think, Work, Get Busy. There is no room for Cobwebs where a mans Brain Cells are flashing real THOUGHT here and there and everywhere. If you feel that Cobwebs are clogging your Thinking Machine and that your efficiency Is being impaired heres a quiet little tip Sweep out the Cobwebs. required and commanded until we don t know who, where or why we are. "All we know is hat we are supposed to be possessed of an inexhaust-abl- e supply of white space for every known need, desire or hope of the human race, and beause we will not giv it all away and go out and beg, borrow or steal money to live on we are cussed, ' discussed, boycotted, talked to, talked about, lied to, lied about, held up, robbed and nearlv ruined, and the only reason we keep grinding on and getting out the old sheet is to see what in heck theyll ask for next. ined, informed, Advertising in this paper will bring good returns on the money invested JsP The Utah Agricultural College The Home of the Efficient Education Begins its Fall Quarter Monday, September 15 Degrees and Vocational Courses Offered in the Schools of AGRICULTURE, HOME ECONOMICS, COMMERCE AND BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION MECHANIC ARTS, GENERAL SCIENCE . AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING For catalog and further information address, The Presidents Office, Agricultural College, Logan, Ut. UTAH Are Necessary Why We Sell the Battery This office has received the following letter from Milton Bennion, Dean of the University of Utah: As you know there is great shortage of properly qualified teaehers. This is true both locally and nationally. It appears to us that the public shools can be provided with well trained teachers only as more high school graduates qualify for the teaching profession. The advantages of teaching as a vocation, can best be brought to the attention of students by superintendents, principals, and high school teachers. Concerning the situation in general, I have the foiowing letter from the superintend nt G. N. Child: You are in a position to appreciate fully the eritial condition which confronts us in regard to providing our schools with qualified teachers. This, at the present time, is especially true in the elementary schools where we are obliged to use hundreds of girls without normal training or leave the schools withut teachers. ' Now the State Board of Education is very desirous first, of maintaining its present standards for certification, by requiring at least one year of normal work above the high school; and second, of advancing its professional requirements as rapidly aa possible to the end that only persons prepared through adequate study and training may be placed in the class room ha teachers. It is recognized, of course, that the salary question is a most important one and it is our plan to emphasize it in every way we can with a view to bringing about "early a decided improvement throughout tin entire state always remembering that competent service must accompany any increase in salary schedule. In order, however, to improve the present situation, I . m impressed with the necessity for some campaign work to induce a larger number of our high school graduates who have aptitude to prepare for teaching. Approximately five or six hundred teachers withdraw from our school system each year. The entire number of normal graduates in our state would not, as you know, begin -- to fill these vacancies even though all of them were to go into the school room and become successful teachers. In thinking this whole matter over I have thought that perhaps the Training School faculty of the Schod of Education.. eouldhelp.QU.t j J sjJoi4 way. If a little more publicity lfpuld be given to the Training Schol it would no doubt be helpful. The 'public press might be used and public meetings held wherever arrangements could be made to hold them. The Review is a medium through which the school might function regularly in presenting plans and ideals to the teachers of the state. I suggest also that you address, letters to the superintendents of the state asking him to present before prospective high school graduates the needs of the state for efficient teachers and the opportunities that are offered in the teaching profession. Other means of publicity will no doubt suggest themselves to - willi the Dreadnaught Plates t x r determine, we know that battery plates BECAUSE and the length of service a battery can the foundagive on a mans car. Battery plates are tion of battery quality. No other battery offers plates that are as rugged," as lasting, as Dreadnaught Plates for they are made by an exclusive Gould process. Unequalled as they are, Dreadnaught Plates alone do not tell the story of Gould Quality. A generation of experience in building storage batteries for every We recompurpose is another indispensable factor. mend and sell the Gonljl Battery because we have confidence in the makers and we know the invaluable advantage of Dreadnaught Plates. st-vt- Recharging Testing SQUARE DEAL REPAIR SERVICE SHULER MOTOR CO. ' State School of Education is prepared to provide professional training to a large group of college students. It offers one year of professional trainthe ing to meet the requirements of r second grade certificate; courses leading to Kindergarten-Primary- , Elementary Kindergarten, diplomas School, and Rural School courses leadrespectively; three-yea- r ing to junior high school diplomas; r courses leading to A. B. or two-yea- four-yea- PAYSON, UTAH and high school diploma, to diplomas in primary, grammar jor health supervision, and in and grade, Educational Administration. In short it offers professional preparation for all grades and departments of the publis school service. School The William ' M. Stewart beis School) Training (University ing moved into a new, strictly modern building and the University departments most concerned with teaehB. S. degree c'ir.training begin the new year in better quarters with enlarged teaching staff and superior equipment. of the We solicit the press, superintendents of schools, and in bringing high school principals Jhese facts to the attention of the students. Very truly yours, MILTON BENNION, Dean, School of Education, sity of Utah. . tTniver-- - you. I write this letter merely to express the great needs of the state for added service in training teachers. We shall with you in every possible the work." in increasing way While teachers salaries are Tela, tivelv. low, in terms of dollars they are higher now than ever before; although this is not true of the purchasing power of the salaries. The hopeful sign is that the public is thouroughlv awakened to the necessity of matersalaries; ially increasing teachers plans are well underway in both state and nation for increasing public revenue. Larger salaries, however, mean for higher professional standards teachers. Teachers in the service be content and children of the country will never receive their dues so long as teaching is looked upon as a makeshift. Young women who may think they will follow teaching only a few years should not make this an excuse for' failure to secure thoro professional training for the work. Now is the time for young men and women to secure the necessary scholarship and professional training to The meet these higher standards. can-neve- IN THE SELECTION OF OUR BRANDS A SURE SIGN. She wanted of tea, we have exercised special care to secure only those teas that are colored naturally and that have the natural full tea flavors. It may well be that you have never enjoyed the real tea flavor until you have tasted ours. play Carmen And look like this, e h e said, She knew that she could do it Our Teas Are Guaranteed For her lips were carmine red. MEAN CAT. called on me yesterday afternoon. Yes, he told me he had some time to kill. Reggy mm ) More Teachers By OKORQE MATTHEW ADAM8. Oobwebs are the result of inattention. The Housewife who la careless In her home duties soon has a lot of Cobwebs look- PAYSON, V r 'Royal Cord 'Nobby' 'Chain ' Uteo Plain, We Vouch for Them Of all the tires that are made, why do you suppose we prefer to sell United States facilities, they employ many They have choice of materials, they have immense a Tires? Because they are made by the biggest rubber company in the world. And they know how to build good tires. exclusive methods. They can go to greater lengths in testing, improving and perfecting the things that make good tires. We find it good business to sell United StatesTires. And you will find it good business to buy them. Th are here a tire for every ne United StatesTires ore Good Tires We KNOW United States Tires are GOOD Tires. Thats Why We Sell Them DAVE SHULER, Payson, Utah SPANISH FORK TIRE WORKS, Spanish Fork PEXTON BROS. AUTO CO. Springville, Utah. SALEM MERCANTILE CO., SANTAQUIN GARAGE, Salem Sarlaquin, Utah |