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Show TIIE PAYSONIAN, PAYSON, UTAH atlfjifference in Business Ethics Caused Trouble TtEW YORK. If the actions of two old clothes men are to be accepted, the LI first vital effect the world war had upon the United States Is to produce , unheard of scarcity of second-hanftcently after a wild forenoon that the tfead lines of Germuny are presently 4Mt , . t I d be duplicated In this country garments. Both men made It clear by Oothe s lines, weskit showers and other vities calculated to keep the wear-- I I tti of tfJJB second-han- d clothing from open, say nothing of nude, revolt. All of these facts and about a lOTluud of language was brought forth Jien a flat dweller in an uptown eet heard the cry of ol clothes, bellowed beneath his boudoir Jndow and beckoned once, and a mo- lent later there developed what sounded like the advance of a Roman mob 6 the floor below where the beckoner lived. Doors were opened, slammed d locked, windows raised and the roars of alarmed tenants presently ught the police. They found the two ol clothes men rolling over and over and hither and Jther and elsewhere on the second floor. When separated they immediately Reused each other of everything and made It clear that from henceforth Atil the day they roll into their mausoleums they will sue each other in jrery available American court on every possible charge attending the sale old clothes and allied industries, ffvi In the llarlem court each man insisted that the other had attempted to cut "t jb out of business and that the flat dweller had never even considered the le beckoned. They declared that nowadays a suit of second-hant V?r le jthes is a clothing Kohinoor and that for another clothing dealer to crash Id a house and steal a beckon is j. Snt positive the worst as can be in such Each insisted that he had bought nothing all day and bad ti,jS j.e ut ft jgjipndod to break his luck not his head, upon entering the flat house. They at l$,M&g foreign hymns while paying fines of $2 each. - S- D. A. R. ANSAS CITY. The flag was a very old one and ragged and dirty. It had sered its time nnd earned repose in the treasure chest of the police For flags may not be placed in waste host's. Police station No. 6 is not at best ornamental, nnd the flag bad worn itself out rippling patriotism in the breezes half under a viaduet at Twentieth street and Flora avenue. Undoubtedly, it would still be doing its soiled and pitiful best had it not won a champion. No knight in armor or soldier in khaki came to its rescue. But a bright-eye- d lady stopped her car In front of the station. She walked bravely in and up to the police sergeant in charge. Are you the captain? she taet-ll- y inquired. Then, without waiting for an answer, she told her errand, e words tumbling over one another in the haste of their delivery. I am a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution. We pro-on- e you have flying out there is In a condition that makes It legal offense, for a federal law forbids any public office flying either torn or soiled. Please take it down. It has been soiled jjpd torn a long time. The officer looked very much surprised. lie gazed earnestly at the bright- .f frightened. iyed woman, exquisite in appearance and a little bit office. Go out there, he Then be turned to a policeman seated in the and take down that flag." fj laundered, " The incident was closed. The lady departed. But the next morning, lrthen she passed that way, taking her surgeon husband to St. Lukes hospital, Ylfine new flag was flying from station No. G. 1, b Joorkesper Succumbed to High-Soundi- Title ng At a night session up on Capitol Ilili not long ago a large person from the AVest, with considerable nerve and no modesty, to get into one of the public galleries. Because of the fear on the of a certain irt employee that he will ( jt kidded to death by this narrative, jUt us not ask whether it was the tjpuse or senate gallery. However, the tjrge person had a fine set of mustaches, upturned and diplomatic in Heir general aspect. With him trailed tiree women dressed to kill in the iCfiest stuff you ever saw in all your WASHINGTON. Well, all the galleries were filled, Bticept the executive gallery and the Cipofflatic gallery. The large nervy ' tfirson didnt think he could bluff his way into the presidents own reserva- -' just his luck that tin, but he waltzed up to the diplomatic gallery, and it was moment. on at was the that not veteran job doorkeeper regular The substitute, though, looked him over, and decided he must be ,Cing or other with all that mustache and that fleet of females. ".iff It Is necessary to have your card, though, said the doorkeeper, because Jiave to know who you are. I I have 110 cards with me, responded Nervo. But I am the Ahkoond of MKCfcat and these are three of my wives. ' went And with that the doors swung open and the quartet of I sat down, gazed upon the session below and later retired. - 4 The next day someone told the substitute doorkeeper that Nervo had put oae over on him. Aw, shucks, replied the substitute, that aint nothing. Freaks like that , tmtt injiere every day. . f , four-flushe- re- - it. f Allege That Millionaire Miser Stole Potatoes - rry. - Up niCAGO. dv John H. Hewitt, known as the millionaire miser of Rogers Park, appeared at the Sheffield avenue police station to face T. F. Rege-flwho swore out a warrant for him on the charge of stealing potatoes from a garden plot cultivated by Regelln, n, George Smith and Matt Smith. According to the complaint, the three obtained permission from James Cardwell to use a patch of ground, 160 by 139 feet. All during the summer evenings they would spend their time In the potato field. Then came the fall with the new large potatoes. The amateur gardeners noticed that for some time they found no potatoes in many hills, and they got the idea that someone was removing Jthe potatoes and replanting the vines to rover up all traces of the theft. So I lay do ad in the grass near I decided Id find out," said Regeiin. I jllie patch. Alone comes Hewitt with a lard pail and a trowel and goes to digging. Then hed fill up the hole and straighten the vines. 'I talked it oer with niy partners anil we decided we had lost about S30 worth, and if he (Hewitt) wouldn't come across wed have him arrested, le refused, so we took him to the station. wa brought into court four year ago by his Hewitt, who is eighty-fouM. Mrs. Jessie Wynne, who iiid to have him declared insane. He daughter. and that one year ho testified that he keeps a record of eoiv cent lie Hived on S33.83. r, - v busi-tpuir.jJ- lroved Herself Worthy Member of the mowed and 45 dry ewes placed in the ! Inclosure the first week in July. In two weeks time the sheep had eaten almost every leaf of paintbrush in sight. They seemed to prefer the paintbrush leaves to anything else; at any rate, they would search out Isolated plants in the grass, and the patches (Copyright) which were covered with paintbrush THE SPECTRE OF CONSTANT cleanest are now almost hare. The JEALOUSY. field In the Morgan horse farm is the one which has been used ns a sheep 'Vlii-a man is afraid to remark at pasture for several years, and which, tile breakfast table, even mildly aud when the farm was bought, was as casually, that, from what he has heard, badly infested with weeds as any. Cleopatra must have been a beautiful Pay for Their Keep. woman, it is fair to assume that the even that indicates This experience of constant jealousy dwells in spectre if wool and meat only meet expenses, that household. When a wife fears a flock of sheep can be kept for the to look at the moon because site may tall, slender stalk, but the damage Is labor saved in keeping the farm cleur le accused of admiring the man In it, dethe Is of weeds. It says doubtful, done by the leaves, which are spread the hushund needs to he gently refrom the crown and form a dense mat partment, whether any other farm ani- minded that he is taking a very riyffd on the surface of the ground, eventu- mal has so wide a field of usefulness short cut to killing the love he seems as the sheep when intelligently to hold so sacred. ally killing out all other vegetation. Love is fed by conhandled. Sheep produce meat at n fidence, trust, faith and serene restful Devour Paintbrush. On the Morgan horse farm an area less cost of grain than any other ani- reliance. Morbid jealousy is a poisou of about two acres was fenced off. This mal. They pay their way with the of doubt, and injustice that suspicion exterminate and wool of area had some bad patches they paintthey yield dulls the love It does not deaden. The grass and weeds were, noxious weeds practically without cost. brush. Scientists tell us that every known poison is, in small doses, a stimulant; in larger doses It Is a narcotic ; in still larger it kills. In a mild form Jealousy is inseparable from real love. It rtsx'hNl . is the heart's guardianship of its treas- sSv vv ure. It is the hunger for the sacred-nes- s saw V L y t of sole possession; the righteous demand to be first, absolute and supreme. It is the instinctive protest at even the thought of another sharing in those little tendernesses, graceful attentions, and words, looks and expressions of love that should be concentrated on one, not syndicated among many. This instinctive jealousy, though roused in an instnnt, falls gently to bleep again with a smile of peace at SPLENDID FLOCK OF SHEEP ON WESTERN RANGE. the recognition of a false alurm. Jealousy, in any Instance, must beand pulverized to the depth Indicated long to one of two classes. It is either BRIGHT FUTURE FOR as necessary by the kind of soil and justified by the facts or It is not; it the crop to he grown; and the stubble is a right charge or an unjust one. FIRST-CLAS- S STOCK and rubbish are completely turned un- If justified, the one who causes it may der where it will be out of the way do so, in one er two instances, through nnd quickly decomposed. For most thoughtlessness or because of a less deMajority of All Breeders Now Use crops, deep, rather than shallow' plow- finely balanced appreciation of the nasome mands nnd duties of for love, ing, is the best practice. Purebred Sires, Says KanTo do good work with a minimum of tures are more w ounded by a look than blow. Here a few words sas Authority. power, plows must he equipped with others by a a new properly shaped aud sharpened shares. of gentle protest may bring course of action is that absolutely run A to A bright future for purebred live good share allows a plow . If the offending acts stock is predicted by Edward N. true and little or no effort is neces- jealousy-proofbecome continuous a performance, then to hold it in place. Wentworth, professor of auiinal sary To turn under all rubbish a good the offer der is unworthy of either the breeding in the Kansas State Agricullove or the jealousy. But if the contural college. jointer properly adjusted is necessary. stant jealousy be undeserved, the one The use of grade sires is gradually No stubble or weeds are left sticking thus storming in jealous continuously between a the where Went furrows said Professor good up decreasing. of the love and not is tempest worthy worth. Seventy per cent of the horse jointer is used. traduced and thus put to scorn. loyalty 65 of cent the sheep Keep thepiow'shnrepropcrtly shaped breeders, per weakens Nothing loyalty and conbreeders, 60 per cent of the cattle and sharpened. Use a jointer so that 0 quickly as morbid jealousy; stancy nil Is 50 cent rubbish swine turned unde? of the and completely. breeders, per Increase the depth of plowing an inch noting inspires, feeds, strengthens and breeders use purebred sires. almost guarantees loyalty and conFrom 8 to 10 per cent of the hogs or two each year for several seasons. like loving confidence, real comstancy are purebred, approximately 2', per radeship and restful trust. cent each of beef and dairy cattle, 2 COMBINATION OF CORN Jealousy, even when justified, should per cent of draft horses, 3 per cent of not he permitted to run away with dis1 cent 2 to from and per light horses, ALFALFA PLANT AND The emotional pain It may he cretion. of sheep. natural to feel it may not be wise to These proportions may be those express. There is a tendency to an actually required to furnish the hulk Profitable emotional explosion that may wreck of bret'ders with purebred sires, al- Largest and Most happiness. It is a moment when one though it is probable that there should Gains Made on Cattle Tested should heed the advice of the sign at a be from 6 to 8 per cent of purebreds railroad crossing: at Nebraska Stop, look and Station. for in order to supply one purebred The first suspicion In marlisten. every 30 grade females, to maintain A combination of alfalfa hay and ried life may be more hazardous than purebred herds, and to permit a rigid corn plant gave the largest and most the first real qunrrel. It mify develop selection of breeding animals. The present proportion of pure-bred- s profitable gains on cattle tested at an exaggerated estimate of the imseems to be sufficient in order to (lie University of Nebraska. Corn was portance of what may have been mereword or ae supply the present users of purebreds, fed both in the form of silage and sto- ly a foolishly indiscreet but not so rigid a selection can be ver, and of these, silage was superior. tion. The cattle were fed in groups of The offender, conscious of innocence The practiced as might be desired. fact that probably all breeders will eight steer calves, each for 2? weeks. of real wrong even In thought may con ultimately use purebred sires will Each animal of one group received become angered and indignant at allow a doubling In the percentage of 7!z pounds of corn, four pounds al- damnation many sizes too large for the falfa and 3Vz pounds shredded corn offense; apology for the minor thoughtpurebred cattle, an increase of in the number of hogs, slightly stover daily. The other groifp were lessness may be withheld or if spoken, fed six pounds corn, d pound1 alfalfa ignored in the presence of the injustice in sheep, and more than one-haof a weightier charge. The burden of in the number of horses, w ithout and 15 pounds silage. The silage-fe- d calves avr caged 1.8 injustice becomes shifted to the one selection. of the severity increasing Such an expansion will afford a pounds gain daily per head, or about originally innocent. If the Inadvertence d of a pound more than the of a moment, now looming large, he prosperous future for purebred live stover-fe- d steers. They required only but an error of action, not of mind of stock even though the standards 3.4 pounds grain per 100 pounds of or of heart, it should Instantly be for selection are not raised. Since, howmade instead of five pounds, ns gheu and forgotten because explained ever, standards of selection are being gain in the case of the stover-feanimals. and understood. even an perraised, higher continually corn 45 cents a bushel, at Valuing If there be real reason for jealogsy be centage of purebreds may alfalfa at $8 a ton, shredded stover in a trifle, wise action may confine it and silage at $3 a ton each, the silage to the trifle. Jealousy through Its own ration made 100 pounds gain at a cost indiscreet expression may plant what of $4.66, the profit per steer during the EARLY FALL PLOWING it fears. Let the wounded one seek 20 weeks being $5.88. With the sto- to find the cause that led to the action or ration, 100 pounds gain cost 85.4!, The wife, BEST IN NORTHWEST the inspiring the jealousy. profit being only $1.31 per steer. through pique at being neglected, may receive Innocently and unwisely the Result in Productive Soils Is Ac- PROPER FEED FOR DRY COWS kind attention of another. The brought to realization of the cumulation of Plant Food Roughage Supplemented by Daily A- drifting possibilities of his negligence, llowance of Bran and Oats Is for Next Season. may by special marks of affection, reRecommended as Good. turning to the old courtship methods, restore the old certainty of faith and (By A. C. ARNY, University Farm, SL During the eight or ten weeks that ul ness. If wise, he will let the con Paul, Minn.) The chief reason for plowing is to cows go dry, their food should be of his initial wrong keep put the soil In Shape to produce good chiefly roughage. A daily allowance him from revealing too plainly his pain crops. For the best results the plow- of two pounds of bran or oats, nr a Angry protests and condemnation never ing must be done at the right time. mixture of two parts each of bran tire; they merely put a premium on Grain crops in particular need gener- and oats aud one part of linseed meal and deception. It does not re ccrecy meal makes a proper feed ni o e the disease, it merely drives It ous supplies of readily available plant-foo- d or corn-o- il early in the season. Therefore, for a cow near calvirg. Koine roots nto the system. in the Northwest early fall plowing cabbage, pumpkins, cr squashes are In every instance of jealousy the he to is for grain crops preferred. also very good. Highly curbonueeous nnoeeut one should meet It at the This allows the needed changes that roughage, such as straw and eoru fginning. at its earliest mnnifesta-iontake place in loosened soil to get stalks, is not good at this parti nlar This means recognition nnd started early and to continue until the time. Such feeds, with cold wafer, ,wse determination to remove tho ground is frozen. The result iu pro- cold drafts, or lying out sit night on does not Justify blame or iu but nuse, ductive soils is the accumulation damp or frozen ground, are the chief lignant streams of condemnation flow throughout the cool fall months of causes of caked udder or garget. from an mg hot nnd lava-lik- e plant food and this is easily taken up Vesuvius. by the grain plants the following CHEAP RATION IS PUZZLING 'Here is a false pride that says spring. o is flowing interested in another let For corn, black loam siflls should Difficult to Provide Formula Which I will not compete for his ini go. be plowed in the fall. On the heavier Contains a Sufficient Amount or. If she feels that way, clay soils spring plowing for corn is of Protein. her have her way. Love, happi-often preferable. - and tru are treasures too sacred than In the maintenance of farm poultry Good plowing means mor r us to permit them to slip out of It nich diflicully is often experience making the field appear black. mr lives and leave us lone and dreary, means more than making straight furrniding a cheap and economic ration, the mere technicality of the petty rows. However, a good plowman and especially in providing n formula mide of a moment This philosophy usu: 'j makes straight furrows. In ' inch contains a suQeient r.iro int 'jt rc signatlon may be proper when it stirred rctein. is j a w,.! plowed field the soli . d t Little Problems gfcTHarried Life (From the United States Department of Agriculture.) Sheep will pay for their keep as weed destroyers alone, says the United States department of agriculture, which just announces the result of a study lately completed in New England. One of the fields of the Morgan Horse farm in Vermont, maintained by the bureau of animal ludustry of the department, lamely for the purpose of keeping up a supply of good horses for the army, was Infested with the weed known as paintbrush, or devils paintbrush. This weed has recently come into northern Vermont, and it Is said that some farms have been ruined by it. It Is now common throughout the Northeast. It throws up a , t PAGE THREE two-thir- lf 3i one-thir- one-thir- d hus-bnn- d, eino-'lorin- n 1 -- 1 1 11 C becomes Inevitable, but ne,er hefora. We would not let health, money, posi-tio- n, reputation or property thus drift away without using every effort to re tain it; why does false pride sometimes make us so reckless with what mean most to us? Morbid jealousy is a real, sad problem of the married life of many homes. It may break out ut any moment and many a guest, us he passes his cup for more tea, is struck with surprise ut the strange expression on the fuce of the hostess, sees the lightning flash in her eyes and watches it strike the Innocent husband ut the end of the table, and the guest almost hears the thunder as he hopes he will be home before the cloudburst comes. And the sudden sultry atmosphere, and that strange hush, with the air of the room surcharged with electricity, may all have come in a moment with not the slightest real e of Justification. It is the love. To morbid jealousy civility, just of the ordinary type, becomes flirtation; indifference, disguised feelings; good spirits, conscience masking a wrong; silence, thinking of some one else all is translated by the cipher code of jealousy. Jealousy always plays with loaded dice the cast Is always foreordained. Jealousy does not require a cause, it is satisfied with an opportunity. It may be inspired by what one does or does not do, what one thought or did not think, what one said or did not suy; it may be whut one might have, could have or should have done or said or left undone. Jealousy conjugates In all moods and tenses. To this morbid jealousy explanations mean nothing but aggravation or a change of a base of attack. The most tactfully delivered explanation Is often dexterously caught, and with a whisk of the voeabulury Is quickly transformed into a foaming whipped-crenconviction on some other phase, while the innocent sufferer, iu a dazed way, wonder how It was done, Vesuvius, Inin its eruptions, is slow', snail-lik- e activity compared with the explosions of this Jealousy. Unlike cigar smoking, jealousy is not a one-se- x specialty. Tills morbid jealousy is always unreaIts misinsoning and unreasonable. terpretation of a word, a motion or a glance muy throw into eclipse the loyal unselfish devotion of a life, and the one who suffers innocently in this tempest must bow the head In helplessness, realizing that words of protest would count no more than attempting to lead a tornado to change Its Itinerary. Jealousy stifles faith, which Is the soul of love. It Is emotional suicide. It is a peculiar form of fear which seeks constantly to discover what it does not wunt to find. Jealouey la the chloroform of confidence. It requires faith to keep faith, trust to retain trust, love to cherish love. self-tortur- Jealousy blights spontaneity and the free expression of ones, thought ; one soon consigns one subject after another to the quarantine of the unspoken. One invc 'militarily sterilizes ones conversation, omitting simple little incidents and references nothing In themselves but which experience has shown carry so that one involuntarily picks one's way carefully in talking, like a person getting up at room, night in a dark, llow Cupid must moan when he finds married people grown tactful and politic with each other. The delightful free interchange of thought can exist only us love and trust make Bluebeard chambers of interdicted subjects unnecessary and impossible in converWe should guard carefully sation. against closing up any room of confidence in the mind and heart of one wclove. There Is pathos In this morbid Jealousy, for innocence of the object of the feeling can prevent It. It Is like one of those concave or convex mirrors that distort whatever passes before them. This unreasonable jealousy Is hard on two peopfe the subject and (he object. Its presence In the home means a problem for two. For one it means the overcoming of a morbid suspicion and the other somehow to keep the sacred v flame of love burning There is always despite the storm-signal- s, chair-sprinkle- d suspicion. lessness and of hopelessness in resting under a cruel, unjust charge more awful when it Is made by one who should be most ready of all the world to he convinced of the innocence of the accused. Jealousy is a disease that can be cured only by the subject, not by anyone else In all the world. No matter how gentle, kind, forbearing, forgiving and forgetting the object of it may be, this in Itself will not cure the attacks. The subject whose heart Is thus swayed by fierce gales of jealousy must first awaken to the folly of It, the Injustice of it, must be conscious of the trail of bitterness and unhappiness it brings to both, must realize the cruel continued assault on the tolerance, love, loyalty and patience of the other, and when the next attack comes, seek by strength of will, by force of character, by conseorated nnd by every help of highest wisdom to kill the feeling. Jealousy must he fought as one would battle against a pestilence that threatens the safety of a town or a county. It is not sufficient conquest merely to hold buck the expressions of the jealousy; the continuous repression simply defers the explosion ami makes the next outbreak more disastrous. Jealousy must he killed in the thought. Iu the mind, the battleground of the soul, mu-- l the fight of In the extermination he waged. thought must the jealousy ie neutralized liv faith, conquered by justice, nnd transformed by trustful love into a restful abiding confidence that only absolute proof and certainty of Just cause can ever reawaken. self-contr- |