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Show THE BA YSONTAN, FAY SUN, UTAH xxxxxoxoxoooooxxxxxxxxxx 00$X0XXXX0-0X0- BRITISH WOUNDED PASS THROUGH FRENCH LINE 0 Live Mews from Live Z ! it Mear-b- y Towns, by Our Live Correspondents xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxx ooooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooo oooooooooxxxxxx enterMrs. Renta Peterson tained Wednesday, the oeeasion being the birthday anniversary of her daughter, Mrs. John Franks of Canada. Twenty guests were present. .Mrs. Franks will leave next week for her home. Mrs. Clara Leinar relumed home to Eureka .Monday after! spending the summer with her mother, Mrs. M. Gunderson. A ehic.ken supper was given at the home of Hoy Peterson Sunday evening. Those present were Mr. and .Mrs. Henry Miss Agusta Pylnnd. Miss Miss Mable Myrtle Cushing, Chatwin and Charles Cushing. Uy-lun- Mr. and .Mrs. Melvin Open-sliawere entertained at their home Wednesday evening by the following: Mr. and Mrs. Har man Olsen, Mr. and Mrs. Peter E. Peterson, .Mrs. Johnny Mr. and Mrs. Dave Crook, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Openshaw, Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Kvans, .Mr. and Mrs. George Beebe, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Openshaw, Miss .Myrtle Cushing, Miss May Jenkins, Ulysses Mace and Belaud Openshaw. and son Mr. H. (). Ryltiml and Mr. and of Provo, Floyd Mrs. Henry Dylund motored to Neplii Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Will J. Evans motored to Lehi the last of the week. While there they attended the ward reunion. pen-sha- and Mrs. W. R. Green-halgand sons Mil is and Martie and Mr. and Mrs. Tom tarry-maof to Hureka motored Fountain Green Friday In visit relatives. Misses La Yern and Winnie lleelis returned home from Salt Lake Friday. While there they were the guests of Mrs. John Duncan. Mr. h 1 n vic'itinii in Salt Lake, the angsts of Mrs. Albert Hagen. .Miss Maria Peterson ami Miss lVrcilla Kay entertained at the home of the former Saturday evening in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Wen dal Stewart of benjamin. The invited guests were. Miss Leah JFoIIaday, Miss Lula Jarvis, Miss Sylvia Rees, .Miss Leatha Tietjen, Miss Mable Chat- win, Floyd Kay, Rueben PeterI Hiring lie fiercest of the fighting in a buttle in France British wounded son, Owen Kay and Jack Hanon the way to hospitals were curried past the lines of the French. As he sen. pusses the trenches filled with machine gunners in action this wounded Mrs. Clias. A. Tietjen and son Tommy, interested, inis raised his head to watch his French cousins help at the rear in the woods cavalry horses can he seen Stanley and Naomi Tietjen are hold the Ilun. Awnyriders while wait the command to advance. their corrnled visiting at Salt Lake at the home of Mrs. Tietjen s son, 11. Scessions of Eureka; and the C. Tietjen. iosl and hostess. Eater in the PUBLICITY SHOULD Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dairyman Farm Burafternoon h;.e returned to their home at eau Agent Jennings and wife BE CONPELLED Kmvka after spending the past ml three children were the week visiting at the home of Mr. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Taylor an 1 Mrs. W. R. Greenhalgli. A Remarkable Situation in Refeed. nt a watermelon Mr. and Mrs. Rollo Wadsworth gard to Laws and Ordinances Thursday evening the Sunday of Spanish Fork spent the weekEnacted. school officers and teachers amid end here visiting friends. their partners surprised Ezra Mr. belaud Openshaw returned Edman at the home of his father Utah Should Come Out of the to Salt Lake Friday after sever- Mr. John Edman. The evening Dark, and Light Shed On All al days stay in this city. was spent in games, a musical Public Acts. ilrs. Hilda Tanner of Nevada program and refreshments. is the house guest of Miss Bertha Mr. and Mrs. Angus D. Taylor Every man, woman and child Nelson this week. and baby Sterling went to Bay-so- is liable to arrest and fine, if Mr. and Mrs. Dell Kay anTuesday evening to a fare- - not imprisonment, if the laws nounce the marriage of their well party for Mrs. Taylors1 and ordinances of the state am Stewmother, George Martin, who will comm unity are not kept. daughter, Fay, to Wendal were of Ignorance of the laws will excave the first, part of Septem-te- r art Benjamin. They cise uo one. The defense of married Monday at Farmington. to he a soldier, ignorance or misinformation will Mr. and Mrs. C. Johnson of Farm Bureau day was not get very far in any court. (nunty Kanah announce the engagement held here Wednesday. A large But what are the laws and the of their daughter Mattie to Mr. rowd of pimple ordinances! I low can one keep Mayrel Tietjen of this eity. The were here for the day. The girls from violating them if he knows marriage will take place Wed- hand of Provo furnished mush' 'not what they are? There may nesday in the Salt Lake Temple. for the day and the dance at he no intention of infringing, Mr. Ulysses Mace came down night. Governor Bamberger was hut simply lack of knowledge. from Provo canyon Monday to present. There may be ordinances and Mrs. Dave visit his mother, J, t,mt violfltei the libMrs. Eliza Curtis, assisted bvUws he used. Crook. He is employed in one of of can all, yet erty lier Lillian, entertained the power plants in the canyon. Mrs. daughter Frank Mayweather of ProMiss Lizzie Borgenson of Salt vo, Mrs. Sarah Stewart of Maghere. na and Mrs. Nellie Hall of Pay-- ! Lake visited the week-env She was the guest of her mother son, Sundav. Dinner was served e!,tent y violated. . Passing laws in the dark may Mr. N. Borgenson. ai he all right in the land of the Mr. Raymond Bennett came Mr. Charley llanks, who was kaiser, hut not in Enlightened down from Salt Lake Sunday hurt in on automobile accident Utah. Yet this can he doi as to visit with his parents before a few weeks ago, is around row there is no law compelling the leaving for one of the camps in and feeling much better. bodies to various the East. ordinances or laws so publish Those hoys expecting to leave that people may know about from here the first part of next them. month are Messrs. Ray Sabin Many civic corporations do I out-of-tow- Government, all men qualified to attend Collet thould register in the S. A. T. C. AT ONCE, New and former etudentt may register at the Utah Agricultural College BY MAIL. Fill out and aend tha Colfollonng card to the Registrar. Utah Agricultural lege. Logan. Utah. It wtU constitute you upon acceptance by the Institution, a student of the Utah Agricultural College and a member of the Students Army Training Corps. If you are over 21 but have not yet been called lor military aervice or have been given deferred classification, you may enter the Utah Agricultural College and enroll in the Reserve Officers Training Corps. You will then receive special military and academic training to prepare you foe a commissioned olfke in the United States Auny. On September 5th, if the present dreft bill become a law, all young men ol America, between the age of 18 and 21, mutt register lor tome form of military aervice. It the expressed dewra of the War Department and the State Council of Defense that all qualified attend college and tecure a cotnhmauon of military and academic train- ing. To make thw possible. a Studema Army Training Corps S. A T C ) haa been established at the Utah Agricultural College. Should Congress lower the age ol liability to immediate military aervice. men of the new age NOT ALREADY ENLISTED may find difficulty tn entering the aervice otherwise than through the Draft Men who enlist m the S A. T. C , when they Boards. tome under the jurisdiction of the draft law, WILL BE PLACED IN CLASS 5D. To meet the request of the REGISTRATION CARD HMH Agricultural College of Utah Special Mail Nifufraflee r Utt and the undersigned, a carwbdat for admmtoA to the AjrkuJtiaal College ol InemwOoM, do hmoy pUdge mvU. on being ndmi'ted. ao isetofm etnciW sag at Date addroee af birth Father! sum .. - ... .. rvWo. and by all proper . . -- Format - - itudentf (Aneww Yee or Not Addrean Cowtir Nearly every sate in the west has such laws, except Utah, which is strangely behind in this important matter, and where bodies want to put it can be something over, easily done, j j j i law-maki- Some well-meanin- officials g may talk of the expense of doing this, but should expense be thought of when it means so much to the people at large, who must obey the ordinances and laws that are enacted? Really, can a free, enlightened people afford not to have its laws publislfcd? Hcre is an important matter that the mmbers of the legisla- Wm. S. Hart, in A Desture should consider at the next ert Man at the Gayety session, and we call it to the atWednesday tention of the voters and the men who seen to become members ol ife legislature, aiu those aims, needs and usefulness of the country newspaper to a who holcf over. ffig pexf wjl. apTile legislature will be asked coram gijity. in rtsi'm of T)P an pear early to pass a jaw compelling the Paysoniai). all of laws, orqingip publication ees and resolutions in a news3 paper where tipsy take effect, as a matter of protection to evey Com in ond person. Failure to pass the law, renew it next or not to vote in Its favor will Subscription time you ore he looked into very carefully, and we will ask why, in town, This is the sixth article on the g and Yern Edman with Maurine Hiljery Holder and Bill expected to be gone a few days. Nuttal as alternates. Mrs. Burton and Mrs. Thomas Mr. Alma Christensen, sop of was Mrs. Elizabeth Christensen, Haynes and daughter Echo of at on for Payson spent Friday in the Gore appendicitis operated the Provo general hospital Sun- home. day evening. B. A. Smith and family attended a party south of Santa-siiiFriday evening given in hronor of Mr. Smiths cousin, Thomas Smith, who left Saturfor army service. day Charles Frank Brooks and G. II. Russell and family of Jerman arc recfmt purchasers of Fords. Elberta, Mr. Russell Sr. of Miss Hazel N. Y. Nelson and Fred Ear-se- Wichita, Kansas, and of Whitewater, Kansas, Russell were in Provo Wednesday visited Mrs, H. W. Gore Saturacting as a Farm Bureau committee seeking . a satisfactory day. Jack Drysdale was given n contract with threshers. Not successful farewell there wept they party Monday evening being to Spring City Saturday on a hv his friends and neighbors. similar errand. On cacti occas- Mr. and Mrs. Drysdale left Tuesion Mrs. Larsen and Mrs. Nelson day morning for Salt Lake from and the younger children of each where he v ill report for military two Mrs. Drysdales family accompanied them for ihc service. pleasure of the outing. Mr. am brothers, Soron and Augustus Mrs. Larsen formerly lived at Peterson who have farms in our Spring City and have many rela- valley each lord Saturday for the tives and friends there. army. Mrs. Anna M. Gore left SunA. L. McClellan and family and Mrs. 11. E. M unday, also day for Payson from which place Frank and Karl Brooks motored she accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Wildman Murphy to Salt Lake to Salem Sunday. A farewell party was given at City in their Ford. She will meet W. R. Gore ip Charles Samsons Wednesday her youngest son and Lake Salt return to Genola. Lof-i evening in honor of Isaac visit will he short as ('0,,('s four!Mldnhl. The guests included 'vil1 within a families of Eureka friends ns days. He has been in the U. well as local people. Mr. geological ,ssurvey for the past dalil left Saturday for duty in hfrP northern the National Army, lie was Montana. as Provo as far by 3 companied Mr. Samson with whom he had Final arrangements are fast made his home for some time, being made for Ihe second an- Z. H. Ewell and family am m,al 010,1010 Fair to he held Sep-Mand Mrs. Tavlur of Goshen, G'lnher 26th in the new school The fair programs are parents of Mrs. Ewell, went to Guiding. printed at the Paysonian Salt Lake Monday in Mr. lors car. The trip was made in office. the interest of little Miss Annie H. Y'. Gore was in American Ewells health, and the party Fork and Provo Saturday. Davis, n Genola Jottings. n Has Your Expired? ISCI j Payson Agricultural and . r- - - - (cur m! Yoor law-makin- I knowledge. j Lof-if''- v . Mothera name The entrance fee of IS 00 ahou Id be enclosed Check or Post Office money order accepted. (The student my payment of the $5 00 entrance fee until he arrtvea at the School.) The applicant should report lor work on September 30th, or as soon (hereafter u possible. Candidates are admitted to the Freshman dam who are graduates of high schools or who have 15 units of high school work. In certain cases mature students or others may be admitted conditionally to the collegiate work of h Institution if they satisfy the committee on entrance of their ability to successfully carry the work. Those 18 years of age or over, or those under IB who have had two yean of high school work, are admitted to the vocational InthII this,, hut Ihe fact remains they! are not compelled to publish the ordinances in a newspaper, so that people may read and have Wei Iworth Store Bldg. September 13 and 14 Present - Birthplace Legal guardian Sem times, to its Age - - to the Studeota Army Training Corps ail ... ...... m Hoar Farm Tlie Clottileris n j Opportunities at Logan for Utah and Idaho Bojri in Training Corpa to Train for Commuiont in U. S. Army and for Technical Service Lant & Persson , d Enlist by Going to the Utah Agricultural College Now by Rejuterias practical courses of the College without examination The Utah Agricultural College is responding auicently to the Governments request that military and tsrhnacal experts be trained. It maintains, unimpaired, however. aU organisation for college and vocational work in the eia great Schools of Agriculture. Home Economics Agricultural Kngvteerutg. Mechanic Arts. Commerce and Special Business Adminmiattoe. and General Science. opportunities ottered to gull m Home Economic. Child Welfare and related work. Teachers trained, meeting all Smith Hughes requirements. Fall term opens Septem ber JOth. For further information, addtesa Presidents Office. Utah Agricultural College, Logan. VJtBi t tbt UTAH AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE $t EXPERT CLEANING and REPAIRING . Ed-ma- n, I Chief among them is the BETTER CLASS way we do our work and the excellence of our service. THAT service includes also, the highest limit of quality consistent with the lowest iimit of price. n Salem Notes. ht we to Let Taylor do your have a host of good reatailoring we sons why you should! -- Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Wadsworth have entertained ns their guests this week, Mr. Wadsworths parents, Dr. and Mrs. Wadsworth of Morgan City. Mrs. and Alvin Robbins daughters of Canada are here for a short visit, the guests of Many Salem people attended Mr. and Mrs. Pertiee Robbins. Stake Conference in Spanish Mrs. Caroline Robbins enter- Fork last Saturday and Sunday. tained Tuesday in honor of Mrs. A farewell party was given Alvin Robbins and Airs. John Friday evening for Ezra Franks, both of Canada. Lynn Gardner and Ivan Mrs. Chns. A. Tietjen, Mrs. W. Davis, who leave August 30th L. Openshaw, Mrs. J. A. Rees for U. S. service. A large crowd attended the reception at Payson was in attendance. Wednesday in honor of the reMr. and Mrs. Eli F. Taylor tiring Stake Relief Society offi- entertained at a family dinner cers. It was given at the home Covers were laid for of the new Stake President, Mrs. Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Swen 0. Nielson, ITepsy Lewis. of Fairview; Masters Howard Mrs. J. L. Olsen and 'son Har- and Ray Taylor of Payson; Masry are spending a two months ters Frank Taylor and Elmer icvr When askyou "y fm Enos Simons will receive entries for Display from All F armers and Mrs. Ann J. Lovpleps vll Receive Entries from AH Women Wishing to Exhibit, r. ! Tay-.ln- R THE EXHIBIT IS FREE AH are Invited to Attend iminuiunuiiumimnimnimaauiliaaaBI s s |