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Show illfc iAYSONIAN, PAYSON, dei'w nod Varilf putting farm products on tho free list, tho American farmer THE PAYSONiANj flat broke. Senator Wulnli belongs to a great nianufai luring state. It depends for by the it prosperity ufHJii the continued and PA YSON1 AN PUBLISH! INO CO. p ofitalil,; output of its industries. To save each family of Massachusetts $M) a year, Senator WaLh would dc- HUliSCRI lTION KATES. ive the American farmer of a prof-- i Oho Year, in AJvnee $2.5' able home market and force him 11.25 Advance Si Month, I, ick to his economic condition of Entered at the InHtofflee nt Paysun ttio Hummer of 11121. Quite ho. Y'et 40 a sarno American farmer buys I'tah, n hito ml clasa matter. I sr cent of all the manufactured pro-i- l VV. E. EI.LB WORTH, uts of the country. Editor and (iouoral lianager. He is the greatest single class pur- 'ifi-the tex-of textil,. goods--anindus-- t lo indwtry is the greatest WTM WTH- -1 y of Massachusetts. farmer is he gretit- The leather of goods in Amer-- i buyer a, and the leather goods industry LOOK AT tub i f Massachusetts ranks second only l i the textiles. Bubscriber n re linked to watch Tin American farmer is sisiond the label on tlieir pujier and to only to the railroads ns a consumer when remit Hubscrip promptly f steel and iron products, being the tion.H are due. label If your It i mate consumer of 20 per cent of 1 12 21 read it moan thut your th,: steel and iron products of the Hubaeription in paid up to Decemi oimtrv. ber 1, 1221, und that you should Tho American farmer is the largest at that time Head in a mi her $2.5ll onsumer of wood products being fOf the next year. Subscriptions tho ultimate consumer of 40 per cent are payable in advance ft re "f the products of the country. all quiremrnt exacted by nearly The American farmer is the largest If your label show newHpnper.H. consumer of motor vehicles i las8 a date that is pant, please send ho buys 30 per cent of the unnual in the amount further without output of motor vehicles and motor notice. The etc. accessories like tires, lraifil Every Friday at Pftysuo, was Utah d er H Aiiii-nea- label i i At one place not far distant from Jackson the officer,, found a dead blaiksuukc, about six teet long, badly decomposed, in a barrel of trom which the liquid hud bccu drawn. At another still whole the band of sour mash was buried in the giouud a decayed built rug was found, ooutiug on top. At a still of largo capacity of the still was so liltiy that it hud been fly blown aud infested with maggots. The plant was hi op white lightning eratiou, and the w as being filtered through the maggots. Up in Dinector Daily 's office you will so scores of liquor samples tuk-efrom stills which shower on chemical analysis, that concentrated lye was used in the clarifying protin-ca- cess. These liqiioro are manufactured by men who aro iguoraut of tho first element of the laws of fermentation or the rules of sauitatiou. They contho coct deadly stuff by main strength and awkwardness, so to speak, the sole and only aim being to evolve something with a powerful kick in it, and they give never a thought to how dangerous or poisonous it may be. WEALTH OF RELIGIOUS INSTI TUTIONS QUESTIONED Requisition of church valuables by soviet government, rejiorled in lispatches from Russia, raises a ques tion as to th wealth of the various religions institutions of the world. Since the dawn of history people have been lavish with their gifts for religious purposes, whether they worsays shiped idols or an unseen God, a bulletin from the Washington, D. of the National C., headquarters Geographic society. The result is .that in all ages treasure, usually in the form of gold und silver and precious stones, has followed to temples and churches, monasteries and other religious institutions. In any period anil in most parts of the world, then, except dura ing recent decades in the west, considerable part of the liquid wealth of the world Las been in ecclesiastical hands. Only th treasuries of temporal princes surpassed those of the religious institutions, and in some instances, as in Tibet, the monasteries and temple8 held practically all th countrys treasure. , American fanner owns 3,000,000 th, to mol or vehicles, which according data THAT to be right, is to try to nee the truth, to try to tell the truth, to try to live ihe truth ami to try to nil vert iso the truth. THAT membership in your Chamber of Commerce instantly estnb fishes you ns a live citizen who has the welfare of his city at heart. THAT the citizens lire morally responsible for what is done and what i left undone in your city. THAT it, is essential that business eonli men have the unreserved denee of their community, confidence not only ns t their integabilirity, but equally as to tlu-jty to do their share toward keeping their city, A GROWING (TTY. THAT with your geographic ad vantage and natural resources, it i on a time your pity started career of womloriins achievement. I'll T a community cannot be reor formed or remade in n year two. In fact a community never of ii jierfect. Your Chamber Commerce has plans based upon that understanding; every citizen should help to make those plans go over. E. R. WAITE, Oklahoma Shawnee Secretary Board of Commerce. given out by tho automotive owned 'Industrie,, is more than are world outside by nil tho rest of th of the United States.- The American fanner consumes ex- clusively the output of over making farm implements. All of tho employes of theso tremendous industries aro in turn of the products of tho textile and leather industries of Massachusetts. When early in 1021 tho American farmer was tlat broko under the os iiition of the Underwood tariff and Democratic financial policies, ho was not buying. As a result 5,000, 000 Vmcricnn working people were walktho streets. Massachusetts had ing her liberal share of these idle. What did $8(1 a yqar, per family, mean to them? Would they not have cheerfully given it to have obtained steady at profitable wages! employment Walsh would push the Senator American farmer back to his eondi timi ef 1021 and the Massachusetts working men back to idleness in or der to save $80 per year, per family. Do tho workingmen of Massachusetts ngree with bimt Isnt the prosperous American farmer worth something to Massachusetts industriest COO HOW YOUR HOOCH fae-lorie- s IS MADE All Use Gold Archeologists find that the pagan temples of civilization, dead for thousands of years, were ornamented with a wealth of precious metals. Indian temples of several faiths have had their rich treasuries and their lor of gold and silver ornaments centuries; and they have made use as well of a glittering array of diaother monds, rubiea, sapphires and jewels. Many an idol today, from the dim interiors of Indian tcmplee, of looks out through eyes groat, lustrous precious stones, and wears an other gems that might ransom emperor. Christianity had to fight for its life for the first three huudred years of its existence, and its rites were that curried on in tho simplicity secrecy made necessary. But with its official recognition came the tendencies which had marked most of the openly accepted religions which had gone before; toward the making of gifts to churches by devout foland lowers and powerful patrons; toward the use of more elaborate and costly paraphernalia in the services. Constantine, first Christian emperor of Rome, lavished gifts on St. Rotors church in Rome and on Snneta Sophia in his new capital, Constantinople. He thus had a hand . WALSn This editorial is primarily for the benefit of the man who drinks moonare not shine liquor. Olliers who thus engaged in poisoning their bodies will find it of interest. The most invertate hootch hound in Mississippi, if ho could but see is how the stuff he drinks made, would swear off forever. Hardly a drop of the moonshine whiskey being sold in Jackson came from a pine that bore any resemblance to sanitary- surroundings. On tho contrary, the average moonshine still is n plaee of indescribable diit, filth and squalor. The Daily News has, with the perM. mission of Prohibition Director II. Daily, examined some of thp written reports submittted to tho federal enforcegovernment by prohibition stills the ment officer., describing they few have raided during tho past IS DISTURBED MassSenator Walsh (Dent.), of the because is worried proachusetts, tariff American bill, protective posed now before tho senate, will benefit tho farmer. Ifo charges the republi can senators from the agricultural staten with supporting tho bill because it will benefit tho farmer, lie charges the farmer will be benefitted bv protective schedule., on potatoes cereals, fresh meats ect., because the exclusion from tho American markets of foreign importations of these products will enable the American fannfoi er to obtain a profitable price his products. Up to date no republican senator from any agricultural state has denied Senator Walshs statement. It is a pretty safe prediction none will donv it. weeks. The farmers, in Aroostook county, Maine, for example, know bv experience that a protective tariff on po tatoe8 keeps out Canadian and other imported potatoes and by so doing makes it profitable for them to raise potatoes. Tho farmers of the spring wheat belt know that because of the enter summer last gency tarifT enacted they have been receiving tin average of 20 cent., n bushel more for their Wheat than the Canadian farmer has been receiving. .Growers of live stock know that the enactment of tho emergency tar iff stopped the tremendous imports and other New Zealand lamb of fresh meat products from Australia and from South Amoiea. and gunrnn at market Cod him a profitable WftMA nvwv. Tho American farmer knows that combined because of these things, with other assistance in the form of extension of credits, he is getting back on his feet, and able to count on making somo progress again. Put the prosperity of the American fanner irritates Senator Walsh, of Massachusetts. In fact, it angers hnn Tie denounces it as outrageous and something which should bo prevented. Tie ascertains with the ns sistanee of a sharp lend pencil that he inerened prices th farmer will Amer get by reason of the proposed tho livin' icon tariff will add to costs of everr Massachusetts famlv tn (based on a family of six) the n year. That pendous sum of this is a robbery Senator Wnlh his see no doubt. He would prefer to he where back farmer American the was when tho democratic party gave March 4. up the reins of government. demo 1021, when, because ef the Hnnnd the financial cratle, policing - UTAH, JULY 14, 1922. enriching the two most famous and once the two richest, churches ii Christendom. hi Treasures Looted i The luaikeil enrichment of Chris-- j tiuii churches began in earnest hi Duly ami the east in the fifth aniU sixth centuries, and spioud m eailvj medit-vu- i times to Fiance and oilier, western countries. Not only linl tliej huirbe aceiiiiiulnle gold chalices, p.itens, eandiTabrii anil oilier small objects, but many hail laige screens foul of gold and silver as well a ami Matin'. 1V a few of the i hii.ehes altar of solid gold were later church regula presented, but ns Dons prescribed stout; and wood for the only permissible material altars. Precious stone also came in to use to ornament images of the suints or as gifts to them. Thus the Sacred Baby of tho Church of Aral Coeli in Rome has been given over a space of many years a wealth of jewels. Tie accumulation of treasures by temples ami churches and monasteries ha not bien unbroken. Tim,- and time again these convenient stores of preeiiuun metal aud precious stones have been seized by conquerors, have looted the shrines of other anr Mohammedan looted Roman churches in including ISt. Ieters, 84C, and the churches of Constantinople in 1453. Sancta Sophia, after tho break between the western and the eastern churches was sacked by vvesern Christian during the Fourth vessels were crusade; and church token or destroyed in many eases at the time of tho Reformation. I dean Cord Tires . A Few Sizes to Close Out la-gau- s 'lllllilllllllHIKIIIIIIIIIHHnUIIUHHimiH Churches Richest Russian Payson, Utah have Russian church treasuries been among the richest Jn existence in late years. When Russ envoys l were sent out bv Ike then ized .state in 087 to choose a iKitionnl religion, they were most impressed bv the wealth and rich beauty of t he services at Sanea Sophia, Since that been Russian churches have time marked by thoir wealth of ornnmeii- - , tat ion. Screens reliquaries nml be! pie8 of precious metals were to of the in all .und churches. In some of the richer institutions whole walls of sanctuaries were of silver and some floors were of jaxjier. Numerous icons were stud-- j .led with jewels and somo were almost completely covered with various liL.YU" precious stones. Borne of ihe pills "COLU t.Y v... is an acute tt Nasal Catarrh. used were practically small nig3 of to .luent "cunts in the 'loose suP. i ' cano-tion- semi-civi- well-to-d- the Lavra of St. .Sergius, near had treasure with a prewar value of about $325,000,000. At the Cathedral of St. Isaacs, St. Peters- luirg, there was more than a ton of silver in the form of peelesiuseieal vessels, and in addition much gold, Moscow, A Virtuous Example -- She doesn't paint, She doesn t rouge, Probably the wealthiest of all re Bile doesnt smoke, ligious institutions in Russia was the Bho doesnt booze. Lavra, or supermouastery at Kiev. Before the world war it had an an- She doesn t kiss. She doesnt pet nual of half a million income t- gems. nl 1,. will Hie use ol HALE'S CATAKKH iUl'.D.V IMS will Imilil up the and render tin m lors Untile to System colds. Repeated attacks of Acute Catarrh may lead to cluonie Catarih. HALL'S CATARRH ME He INK Is taken internally and rets through the Blood on the Mucous furfures of the bystem, thus reduelm; the inlluinmation and assisting Nature in restoring normal conditions. All Druggists. Circulars free. l J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. hemi-- i I CLASSIFIED ikdlars and a well stocked treasury. Shes And The second most important ins! it u- J BALE B flat cornet quire Bterling e. f " Office 78 NorthUniversity Ave. Provo, Utah Phone cheap. Bijls. CHERRIES FOR BALE- .- Black hearts c Mrs. Geiman Ellsworth. 23-2- PLAIN SEWING Mrs. Charles H. White prepared to Jo all kinds of plaiu sewing. furnished WANTED Three rooms, modern conveniences, or small modem house. Phone 45, Payson. 2 tf-FOR SAT. E Pure bred Blnek Minorca eggs. $1.50 per setting. Iuquiro 10 tf-Barney. . FOR SALE 12 tons of hay and one Jersey heifer. Inquire St mw berry e Hotel, Payson. 12-t- f AND BARLEY for sale Avenue. 015 c 14-t- f FOR SALE 12 acres of choice land close to Payson on south. Inquire W. R. Wightmau at Shuler Garage. 7 One quality only the standard for all Goodrich Tires Size or price cannot modify the one-quali- ty Goodrich standard. You can buy any Goodrich Tire, Silvertown Cord or the popular 30 x 3J4 clincher fabric, and know beyond a doubt that you are getting the same quality always. It is this quality which has made Goodrich Tires unsurpassed for dependability and durability in service, mileage and value. This principle has put the real meaning in the widely known Goodrich slogan of best in the long run. tf c Four FOR SALE House and lot. Three rooms and full basement. John N. blocks from Postofiico. 24 Stark, tf c SALE My homo and building lot on main street. O. A. Daniel FOR 17 SALE.- - 8 Mile M.nlli of sou. and mar ll'lf trims Easv Ph vsen. a tf c Half factory. Pay I'-county road Kennolh Tanner 4 If r fa-- i!'ai- m - My home on west Utah the best homes in town. Has 6 large room and bath completely equipped. Full basement cement walks arounl the house. All construction best wall3 are of materials used. Am offering it for price of ordinary house, snd on easv terms Bee K. J. Tftnaer. FOR BALK A vs. Dlli One of t 108 BBBBBBBBBflBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB.BBBBBBBaBBBBflBflBBBflBBflM FOR BALE OR RENT. Two room cottage. Electric light. Inquire G. 23 ti e Fred Ott. West Utah W. H. Ray In- FOR BALE Horse and buggy. Also building lot. Inquire Vina Tervort. MILK COW FOR S A j .kImpiTre Joseph L. Swartz, Iaysou. 30 2t-- OATS easy terms. My monthly installment loans on city property beats them all. No delay. I want to furnish you with what money you need. 5 Mr. n P. O, Box 288 DEWING by the day or piece. Duffy, 175 First East street. FOR Lots of money to loan on farms on long time and for Work horse and wagon sale. Byron Mendenhall. Good yet! Real Estate Loans Advertisements in this column inserted at th rate of 10 cents per line for each insrtion. All advertisements in this column must be paid for when ordered. No accounts will be opened. ! single BBBBBBBBBBBBBHVBQaaBBBBBBflBBBBBBBBiiBBflJBBBBBBBBBBBfl COLUMN PLAIN AX DF AN Y D E W 1 N quire Mis Lemma Brimhall. thirty-eight- , Look for this Goodrich Tire sign over your tire dealers store. It means satisfaction in every transaction . THE B. F. GOODRICH RUBBER COMPANY Akron, Ohio FABRICS SILVERTOWN CORDS TUBES ACCESSORIES |