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Show THE PAYSONTAT. PAY?OU PAGE TWO Garden Spot One of an be increased considerably by the wide enough to support tlm sadt of young plants grown in the seems to bt the mini, hotbeds am ready for transplanting. though wider beds are unmet used i I'ninaMi, u. cabbage, eggplant, and pep- with supporting ridges phu-e.A well painted per plants are always snapped up foot intervals. when tl,i first warm planting days sush, glneil with good deub well set m putt" come, and they are easily grown in strength glass A the lint bi'il, . itt!(. more spare should gi'e the curefull gardener and a little more seed than the growto 15 vinrs service. er needs fi.r his own use are likely Kent for the hotbid is furnish d Before the by means of a bed of louse inn n u to bring good profits. in the full is n S to Ifi inches thick in the bottom grou id good time to clean out the old hotof the pit. Permanent hotbeds beds. heated with coils of steam or I'nloss the soil used in the hot-bopijies under the bed. Ilotbeds require constant care to is to be exchanged for fresh earth it should be shoveled from the prevent their becoming ovorhca'cd, bed and tossed info a pile near by. especially during bright weather. The deeayed mnnuro from the bottom is scattered over the pile and thoroughly mixed with it to form AMERICANS CAN AFFORD TO GIVE rii-soil for next years beds. Over tills goes n coat of straw or leaves The man who taught modern Amerield down by bits of board to keep cans how to economize, Herbert it from blowing. II oover. is trying to put over a new Some fanners find it convenient to Idea In Utah, lie Is trying to make of I'tiilins and other people of the fnited instead use evergreen boughs straw for the outer eovering. States imagine that they lime an invisible guest at their dinner table. Hotbed Should race South. When the cloth has been .spread, the New hotbed' pits should be dug plaees all set about the family board, average good, wholesome so that they will faeo the south, and Htid tin the loention should be selected so Amerlcun meal made ready, Mr. that the beds will bo protected from Hoover asks that every family in cold north winds and late spring Ptah think of some little child or chilSometimes the earth taken dren over in Europe as sharing that Mortis. from the new pit is suitable for repast. This image eanr lie well sususe in the hotbed, but this is the tained during the coming year unless A Utahns are actually feeding or helping exception rather than the rule. few' loads of leaf mold from the to feed at least nge of these children. It will cost just $10 to feeil one child woods mixed with the natural soil v rich stone-- one meat a day until harvest time, T.ie often form a State committee for ttie European bes mass which gives an idenl hotlief council Is putting one pertinent bed filler. to Utahns In the pH-e- nt fund The back or north side of the question Is the life of a child vv .rtli frame is usimlly from 12 to 18 inches campaign the $10?" They have no fear high, while the south end is about answer of the people of this state v, ill S inches, so that tho whole bed mey he. have pilch enough to get the sun to statements reaching The standard hot- theAccording upon all parts. local relief council oftiee ,n Salt bed stih is handled by most dealers, Lake City, Mr. 11 lover expects tills and measures ,i feet in width an.l present appeal to the American peo(5 A frame just feet in length. ple for the relief of children In central and southeastern Europe to be the last. He believes tlmt if the relief work can only go on until harvest time the nations being aided cun then feed their own people. At present they are adding $2 to every $1 raised in America for the relief of their children, but the combined sum will only insure hare sustenance to the starving little i Mile siiti'-fortor.- mi--.- Most Profitable Whether it is conducted on u:i extensive scale to supply tlic market or whether it is to produce food for the family the gulden plot is likely to be the unst piotitablc tier Gardening leadv age on the farm. the lust hc'gins in the fall, when vegetables huve been removed Bill stored the prudent gardener sets about to prepare the groufid for the years crop, fn-ei-- nr.-ofte- d j Away Refuse. Any rubhiah, dead vines or plants, stakes uid bean poles or tomato should be i h ared away, says the Un.ted States department of agriculture, ami the ground sown to ry or some other green erop to prevent the loose earth from washing uud r A clover crop the winter rains. also improves the physical condition When a clover crop of the soil. can not be supplied the next be-- t tiling that mny be done is to plow or spade the soil and allow it to winter. lie rough throughout the ThiB practice destroys ninny insocM The that lio just below I ho surface. winter frosts huve a lightening effect upon the soil, especially on clnv Clearing earliest and choicest vegetables are harvested by tho man who maintains a few hotbed sashes and uses them to start his garden, lie is aide to handicap the front lint) by several weeks, and to set. strong, well developed plants in his garden at a time his neighbors ar1' planting seed. The farm income is at its lowest point in the early spring, but it hot-nate- r i soils. The j ones. Mr. Hoover has sent out the following statement to the state oftiee; It Is reported to me that there Is a great deal of gloom over the United States as the result of falling prices ami the decrease In employment, and I do not wish to minimize the anxieties of any Individual, but despite this we should he thq most cheerful country In the world, and we do have the real foundation of cheerful giving. We have in our warehouses and on our farms today eighteen months food supply for the entire American people. We have a harvest coming again within another eight months; our shelves are overloaded with clothing, our warehouses with raw material ; we tmve ample coal and our people are warmly housed. If there Is any hunger or any cold In the United States this winter it Is due to the foolish functioning of either our social, our economic or our political system, "We do not deserve the name of intelligent men If we cannot overcome this handicap at home and still do our duty abroad. We might have some room for despondency In America if our situation were that of any of the countries of eastern or central Europe. If we had but five to seven months food supply with the harvest eight months away; If our children were undernourished; If we were not possessed of the essential food for children, if they were without the material with which to remedy it, and if such care as they do receive was the charity of foreign people, vve might have a right to complain. The Right Start The right start counts for a lot with chickens. Often it spells the difference between profitable success and expensive failure. Professor Harry R. Lewis, head of the New Jersey Poultry Experiment Station, will tell you how to get the right start in coming issues of me COUNTRY GENTLEMAN self-nnid- In a remarkable series of fifteen penetrating articles he will characterize, one by one, the major poultry breeds and will point the way to bigger profits with each. that The Country Gentleman Successful poultrymen say is more helpful to them than the exclusive poultry journals. In a single year it prints the equivalent of more than 650 book pages on poultry alone material, all of it, by such authorities as Victor G. Aubry, James Dryden and Ral top-not- ston R. Hannas. And that is only one department of an allround farm service that offers concrete help with every problem of your farm business. A whole year of this service 52 great issues costs but $1. If you send me your check or a dollar bill today, Ill see that your subscription starts next week. You need it in your business A. R, WILSON Phone No. 64-- Pay son J Aa authorised eubeeriptlon representative of The Caaatry Ceatleaiia The Ladies Hone Joaraal The Saturday Eseaia 12 inMa-t2- .M U iaaeaa S2. m 41-- r J COLVIN & REECE CO. PAYSON, UTAH p Broiled Meat fiTi3'ii.2 ir'i.ii pncy, Mv'iC. Lt broiled steak you - an.l that ric tne-t jnifts. Tlvs savory day tr you have a vv.r..cd -- UTAH BUDGET l Acreages on Farm next JANUARY 23 1921. CTATT, i t.x ve always brown gravy made from the a luxury you can cnioy every , e The Bolshevist Cocktail. From the American Red Cross Bulletin of Riga; Helsingfors Tou enn tell a prohibition country by the weird and awful drinks they drink. Take Finland, for example. There they take vodka, 00 per cent, made from potatoes, not from grains, mix it with blue or huckleberry Juice water, in the ratio of one to ten, and gulp down the result Its the only way to get It down ; to sip would be to give up altogether, both on account of the strength nnd the odor. American Red Cross dispensaries working with the Russinn refugees use vodka under spirit lamp? tn place of alcohol. ' Near the border one gets the Bolshevist cocktail. This is a combination of kerosene, vodka nnd ether They run automobiles on it in soviet Russia, ns gasoline Is not to be bad. The Job of chauffeur is much sr tight after." Slewing Down Production. do you like the new hired now manT" I like him first rate, replied Farm- But Ive got my er Corntossel. doubts, about whether we enn afford to keep him. lie talks so Interestin about political economy and things that everybody wants to quit work an listen." Now Antiseptic Discovered. At Bellevue hospital. New York, they are using a new antiseptic, discovered by F. A. Mardon, a graduate nurse, who has been working on it for 2fS It Is called chlorsnl and Is years. similar to several other antiseptics, but has the great advantage over them of not being affected by exposure to the air. Too Young. Mrs. Do Style Elsie worries me. She doesn't like to go to church at all. Mr. Do Style Oh won't mind that. She is too yonng to care much yet about dress and fashions. Boston Transcript. CLffoid Tbuitimti, ,, I,. I xi I. Iro i hit i . . ,.i - I was 27, ; p ol at ,.iit I .t ,e. n ii h .ii i l.i .'in . .. . IMd'.e Nih.ie, 'iil'e-ti- il at S.n. b.ixitig rnlibeil a i aged b, i i t ;i- ilgi-- , old x v. ere With at Ugileii on hnt,ed stoic lanuai'D 1'.). Thirty u o bm s m Uni lie county, i bool of onipi is.ng the til ie the district, are being lor the prel, in'ii. i m .mug ill the clean m land i out est. I. C. llenager of Sail Lake wits re- eleeted president of t lit- - Utah State Bee Keepers' iissoeiatioti ut the clos- ing session of the annual state convention lieid in Salt Luke. The drive for ln.ooo new (members for the farm bureaus of the Mate is being l.iimelied, aecoriling to Lioimlil I)- MeKa.v, pres. dent of tin Utah State Farm bureau, at Huntsville. As a protection against vandalism, Hie Logan postoffiee vvili hereafter be elo. ed at S oYloi k each night and open Hie following morning when Hie first mail clerk arrives mi the job. Mrs. N. Sophia Etigsinin of Bingham City was found dead in her lied, having passed away without her family knowing tlmt sin was ill, except for a slight indisposition the day previous. Thu total value of new buildings and additions begun at Salt Lake during II)- 20 amounted to $. , SOU, oil, compared with if 1,000, 100 during 1010, according to data compiled by the city build.ng inspector. K ports front the poisoning campaign being waged in the western part it' Boxelder county for the purpose of extcilmnuting jack rabbits are to the effect that It is progressing most satisfactorily. Alfalfa meal uay be shipped to Montana now on condition that the shipper first has obtained a permit to make such u shipment from the office of the slate crops and pests commission ut the state cupitol. The proprietors of the various meat markets of Brigham City have combined to install a community ubattoir and packing house, thus eliminating the present system of each market purchasing and killing Its own meat. While confined in the county jail at Salt Luke on charge of petty larceny, Lou Tanner is charged with having forged several cheeks on various institutions in Salt Lake and to have given them to a friend to cash. That Huntsville Is not to be outdone by Eden In the matter of having a waterworks system for the community, is evidenced by a meeting held at Huntsville, which was attended by many representative men and women. William and Ralph Thompson, cousins, 15 years of age, narrowly escaped death from gas which escaped from u heater 'they failed to turn off when they retired ut Ogden. They were found in an unconscious condition. Following a runaway In which his wife was injured, Leonard Thomas, of Salt Lake, tied up his team while he took his wife home in a borrowed rig. Upon returning for the teapa he found someone had stolen the harness from tlie horses. Traced through the sale of slain mans automobile, Harry Nash, fancy roper and expert pistol shot, 1ms been arrested at Los Angeles on suspicion of being the ,murderer of Martin Schwab, of Inyson, who was killed near Flagstaff, Arizona. The Lehi sugar factory finished slicing beets hist week. During the 111 days of the campaign the mill cut 110,000 tons of beets, averaging about 1100 tons per day. About 40,000 tons were shipped from Suit Lake, Boxelder and Wasatch counties. Senator King has introduced a bill to pay the making appropriations claims of various settlers on leased lands of the Uintah Indian reservation who sustained losses through the failure of the irrigation project to provide them with ample water last I ni . r, setison. Agitation for the preservation of Utah's bison herd on Antelope island continues to grow, instead of diminish, since commercialized slaughter of the From Nashville, animals started. Tenn., comes a request for price quotations on an outright sale of the entire herd. Estimated cost for projected road construction and maintenance In Utah during 11)21 and 11)22 is placed at within the state if the McArthur hill Is not passed by congress. If tliis bill does pass, the expenditure within Ibis state, providing Utah does her part, will be a lotal of $.1,22i7,0N0. At the request of Governor Mabey officers who have been active In enforcement of the prohibition laws met in conference with him at the state cupitol .l.mnar.v US. the conference being for the purpose of aeqtitr nting the governor with the plans nnd methods i.nw in twe for the enforcement of the law. Uotatncs weie crown on ITA) acres in Utah it 1!'gi, whit a yield of p.u MiriieN per acre, a total product toil of 1.21)'' into bushels and a value December 1 of S'J.'V'S.Oi'M or Ml cents per d 'ritb $1.37 per bushel, as bushel ill l.ll.i The llnished product of Utah i enient plants will reach $ t.MM.ooo ; flour mills S2.oBt.(VH) : knitt ng factories and ."Kki.iii ?); woolen mills. packing ?5(K.iMK) ; salt, pleats, S'.loi'Otvn; 50" 0 0 leather goods, bakeries, ami oilier building , ). bloeks and .. 1 ; L.Yiui--c-"fHH- 0; m im There are two pa days for mom people: the one on which they ieceive their work money, anti the one on they pay their grocery i ill Our customers have but one ply day. The v pay for their foods as they go. They do not bids. They pay only help pay the credit grocei s dead-beattor what they get and they pay a p;Le baed on economical s merchandising. If you have grocei ies charged and delivered you are paymg out almost twice as much as your neighbor who I; don't matter whether supplies the table from our beet grower or a are fireman, railroader, police man, you rancher, you do yourself a great injustice by remaining in the clutches of the credit grocer. Try the Cash and Carry way just one month Some of Our Prices: Lard ft Tail 10 Milk Crisco I u re Lnr,l Largo Can Sogo Milk Per Case 17c ft Net Pail Pure Lard ft 51 Can Fresh 6 ft Can 3 ft Can Piesh 1 lb Can Frisco... Fresh Crisco $2.11) 2 77e 15c Crisco -- 5ir 27c 2.7c 45c Per 35c 2 Bacon Pork per ft.... Pound 35c Full Cheese, ft lots, per ft Navy Beans ft 10 15c Tink Beans 2 25c 55c ft 15c Pink Beans 15c Tink Beans, 10 ft Blue Rose Head Rice Pounds 15c 2 5 Blue Rose nead Rice 5 Pounds 15c Blue Rose nead Rice 10 Pounds Blended $3.95 Sat k Graham 50c Sick 65c 0 $5c 0 Corn Sack 75c 9 40c Pkg. Oats 40c pkg. 25c Large 25c Post Toasties 11.00 Meal Spcory 45c Self-risin- G9c Flour Cake ft 59c C.crmadc ft Sack ft Sack Pan 89c ft ft 10 75c 27c Rice and Beans I2e Sacks Wheat Flour Flour 20c 30c Cream $2.00 ft 4s 75c Full Cronin Choose, per 5 Flour Pound 35c Fresh Salt 30C ft Sack Blended Wheat 14 1 Ham per ft.. 30c Sugar Cured Brand Milk Flour-Cere- als Cheese 45c Sugar Cured $5.95 5.Tise Engle Cured Meats and 95 Large Can Bordens Milk Cans for 25c Large Can Bordens Milk 15c dpi, 45 Crisco Frosli 25c for Cans 2 f ft Net Rail Pure Lnrd.... $1 15 2 Large Can Seg0 Milk 15e $2.15 O:its..G0c Rolled k 35c Wheat pkg Kelloggs 35c 20C 20c Soap-Wash- ing Powder 23c 15c 20c Fresh Tapioca, 20c Fresh Sago, ft 5 5 ft .50c 95c ij5c 55c Pineapple Can Whole 25c Small 40c medium Sliced 20c can Whole Slice;. 33c 60c largo can Whole Sliced 40c FRESH --MEAT Saturday will be another chance for you to make a big saving on your Sunday meats. 25 Cent Roast, &ne Pour d, 20 Cent Boiling Meat. Or e Pound - - 18 Cents 10 Cents SKAGGS Utah Idaho Wyoming What Puzzled Her. A suffrage mooting was drawing Tho speeches had all to a close. was been made nnd tho meeting thrown open to questions by the audience. Said the presiding officer; Now, is there any woman here who would like to ask a question; Don't hesitate to ask any question youd like to; any question at all about any phase of the woman question. For a few moments there was silence. Then a woman arose and asked: May I ask anv question at allf said the Certainly, speaker, What question won 11 persuasively. like to askt you said the woman, Well, I'd like to know how you got that smooth effect over your hips. Considerate. The captain of our ship proved he a thoughtful man. How sot - soon as we crossed the lyee-"iiillimit, after leaving port, oiderod the ships siren blown to let everybody cn hoard know it was safe to take n drink. Detroit Froo to A-- e Pr. Cot anything in your collar to von warm nexl winter! Notin' g but coal. Louisville Fourier-.Tirnnl. keep i o EUZABETn R. EARLY, Chiropractor, Over V ightman Supply Company Main Street. Office Hours from 10 to 1 and 2 to 6. r |