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Show y THE PAYSONIAN, PAY80N, UTAH, FEBRUARY 10, V The county agent, extension specialists and county project leader will assits in securing seed mid teaching methods of selection. Crop, BoUtton. Members Payson Mountain Club Invigorated by one of the most delightful trips of the winter to the rungor station in Payson canyon last the party composed of Saturday, Yearl Manwill, Kay llanson and Dr. L. D. Pfouts have written of the trip their detailing experiences. Thu party left Payson last Saturday afternoon and returned on Sunday. Much snow was encountered on the uplands and a severe storm was in progress all the way up and back as far as the Crook cutoff. The winter scenes are bcscribed as most beautiful. Snow is reported to a depth of about six feet on the level. " In the gulches the snow is from thirty to forty feet deep. The story follows: The Outdoors Man, iKnxzmnimicsiaimuinxssxxrsssrszn will be secured. Outdoor Life Is the Ideal Declare trails over hill and valley and come buck stronger ami more ready for the work of earning ou daily bread. The time that is spout out in the open is spent to keep the gnui reaper at bay for the allotted time of man three score and ten. It we do these things there will not be the necessity of having the doctor so .often and the undertaker will have to wait awhile to take us on our last rule. No one disputes these things aro true, but we are suffering from too much civilization. It is strange that when we come bck from a vacation taken in the wilds, we do not enter into the duties of our dfforent sphere without some lack of enthusiasm. It is not so in going out. We always have unbounded enthusiasm in anticipation of tho good times to come. We do He must come baek a better man and not reckon the little hardships Beneath the outdoor bronze and tan, the lack lof civilized conveniences. Who turns his back on city strife All thah matters is to be warm, dry To neighbor with the trass; and well fed. He must be stronger for the fight And eee with clearer eye the right, Who fares beneath the open sky And welcome every breeze. i Project No. 3 deals with crop re- m lation, with J. K. Skinner, leader Under this project every farmer will 5 be asked to practice a systematic crop rotation. Each local will appoint a 8 who will to called be leader, 8 project a county meeting where be will be 8 .nstructed in methods of teaching farmers ero rotation. Names of the farmers of the respective locals who a ill rotate cropa will e given. Tin county agent and specialists will arrange with the leader to meet the local farmers and present plans and instructions. B. A. L will furnish Mr. Thorne for lantern-slid- e lectures, Increased yield and mematore will be computed. Buy s A Mutual Benefit ! and you insure your insurance. Fruit Project No. 4, with B. D. Wadley, leader, deals with fruit improvement. It is designed to improve fruit by use of dormant and summer sprays; to teach pruning by demonstration. The county will be asked to buy one of two sprayers and Provo City one as it is impossible to hire men under enforcement of law. Each local con. corned wiU appoint a man to act as leader project leaden The eouaty will call a meeting of all the local leaders, at which meeting the county agents and, specialists will instruct The Utah County Farm bureau has them. Local leaders will appoint a outlined a program of work to be un- .ime for pruning demonstrations and tho county agent will demonstrate. dertaken during the ensuing year, which, if carried out to a successful Pert Control. conclusion, will be of great value to Project No. 5 takes up the matter the people of this county. The lirst of pest control. 0. J. Sorenson is project, dealing with five stock im named as leader. This project in provement, will be under the leader- eludes the extermination of sparrow, ship "of W. H. Chipman. The county field mice, rats, ground squirrels, agent and county project loader will gmsshoppers and other pests. The call the local project leaders to. county project leader will call local gether and decide upon a central leaders for instructions in conduct-agenplace to assemble the animals and and project leader will mix get those interested to bring their poison and instruct the leaders in cattle for exchange. The control of the use thereof. coutagious diseases wherein the project leaders and county agent will Irrigation. , plan in cooperation with B. A. I. for Project No. 6 touches on irrigacontrol of tuberculosis among dairy tion. Demonstrations in the value Desirbe will emphasized. cattle, of early irrigation by use of flood able demonstration in blackleg written will be held and nay outbreak waters will be given and of contagious diseases will be report outlines of instructions will be suped to the county agent, who will im- plied by the extension service. mediately secure government or state Drainage. aid. No. 7, 'with Preston G. PeProject terson leader, deals with drainage, Dairying. and a continuance of last years proj Another goal will be to make cct will be a portion of the progmm dairying more profitable by fostering for the coming year. The 'farmers and supporting tho milk shippers the lake shore will be organized along association tho so that government funds can be seand to encuTage both associations; cures for reclamation purposes. Efforts to increase production of hogs 50 per to complete organizations and begin cent and assist farmers in purchas- constructions will be made. Locals ing pure bred stock; to teach eco- concerned will appoint strong, influ. nomical feeding and proper care;, to ential men to represent them in preassist sheep men in forming a wool paring plans of organization. Copooh A meeting of the sheep men with the Utah Water-Storagoperation will be called and, if possible, they extension Commission, service, will be organized into a pool. Exsenators from Utah, ana United pert help will be secured in grading States reclamation service will be solwooL . icited. Farmers will be urged to join the organization. Poultry. Bond Improvement. An effort will be made to increase the profits from poultry and to seProject No. 8 has to do with road cure assistance of poultry specialists Erastus improvement. Hansen is feedto conduct demonstrations in named as leader. The goal of the . and eaponizing. ing, culling project is to decide the limit of taxation for roads, improve community Meat. Bettor v r roads, etc. Tho farm bureaus will An effort will bo made to secure appoint road project leaders. These meat inspection for Utah county and men will meet the county commis towus and farms, and the farmers sioners on .road tax levies giving the will be called together and a U. S. sentiment of their locals. respective inspector will explain tho plan of Locals will outline community road askcooperation. Uncle Sam will be improvement to be done by themed to furnish an inspector. selves in seasons when not otherwise occupied. The county will be asked Seed Improvement. to loan road tools and nppoint roaa Project No. 2 deals with seed im. supervisors who are competent rather provement. JL W. Gore is the lead- than politically desirable. er, and the object will bo to get Cooperative Marketing. farmers tg purchase and. field select a seed. will Each local appoint pure Project No. 9 hag to do with co. project leader to oversee the work operative purchasing and marketing, of the locaL A list of the farmers with J. F. Skinner as leader The desiring to purchase Or select seed goal of this project is to purchase supplies and market fruit and grain cooperatively. Each local will appoint a committee of as many as aro necessary to pool orders of supplies and purchase in carload lots. Fruit marketing will be conducted by securing cooperation of each local where crop is grown. The following is an example of Mutual Benefit Service. Policy No. 980,285 on the life of a resident of Payson was issued in Extensive Work Is r The man who loves all living things Enough to go where Nature flings Hor glories everywhere about, And dwell with them awhile, Must be, when he comes back once more, little better than before, A little surer of his faith And readier to smile. - A He nevor can be wholly bad Who seeks the sunshine and is glad To hear a song-bird- s melody Or wade a 'laughing stream; Nor worse than when he went away Will he return at close of day Whos chummed with happy birds and trees , And taken time to dream. Edgar A. Quest. What does one get out of the trips great out doors! Why take trips to the places where solitude reigns supreme! Why face hardship and cold rather than stay in a swivel chair or sit by a comfortable radiator or stove and read about tho doings of the world! The answer is physical fitness. Such questions are asked every time anyone goes away from the beaten path and does something that is different. All the world is waking up to the fact that life is becoming shorter and shorter in each succeeding generation. It is calculated from examinations by the Life Extension Institute of New York that seventy five per cent of the men of tho world are defective in the matter 'of physical fitness. Examinations in the lato world war showed that a very large percent of tho young men were unfit for service until they had had some proper training. The death fate between forty and sixty years of age is increaing at the rate of about eighty percent a year. These are serious and alarming facts that wil not longer be ignored. They show that something is wrong somewhere and that we wlil have a change or become so weak that we have to give way to a people that has take warning in time and looked tto its physical fitness. Then too we learn to have a bettor comradeship with humankind, a gentler sympathy and a vaster patience. We learn lessons from stones, crumbling through the ages into fertile soil; we hear the winds whispering to him messages of immortallity whose ears ar tuned to hear. We love the outdoors for out doors sake. Where solitude holds forth in foTgot. ten wilds; where mountains rear their heads against skies of purest ether; like some spiritland of unimagined beauty the mountain vistas open before onj eyes, serene as a paint ni canvas, mysterious as some burned city lifted to view. We thread the to the INI I Tax Bevlaion. Monday, February 13 The Theatrical Treat of the Season BANKSON & MORRIS Present a Western Comedy Drama in 4 Acts MONTANA By Harry D. Carey. Not a moving picture. Children, 25 cents. r Prices Adults, 55 cents, this includes the War Tax. - g A guaranteed attraction. All special scenery carried by the Company. Vaudeville between the acts. Pre-Wa- 36. onthe . Ordinary Life plan for $2,000, with an annual premium of $54.34. The second premium, due November 2, 1921, was not paid, so the policy lapsed December 2, 1921, for non payment of premium.' The insured died February 4 1922. Altho the policy had lapsed, only one premium having been paid MUTUAL BENEFIT, under its peculiarly attractive non forfeiture system, WILL PAY THE CLAIM. ! This is only one of many advantages that you get in a MUTUAL BENEFIT policy. AVOID REGRETS Before buying Insurance investigate Mutual Benefit. without cost or obligation- S Full information furnished Address, Eli F. Taylor, The Mutual Benefit Man, Salem, Utah, or Phone Spanish Fork Exchange. 122-J-- 3 cow-testin- g Payson, One Night ! at the age of l STAR THEATRE S 1920 Planned by Bureau con-ttro- 1922- - iHixxsssrss: INI xxooooxoxxxxxoxxxkxoo The Boling Passion. He owned a handsome touring car, To ride in it was heaven. He ran across some broken glass Bill $14.97. He took some friends out Twas good The carbureter BUI $20.85 for a ride to be alive. threw w fit ' . . He started on a little tour, The finest sort of fun. He stopped too quick and stripped his gears BiU $90.51. He took his "wife down town to shop, To save carfare was great; He jammed into one lamp.post Bill $268. Be Loyal He spent about all that he had, And then in anguish cried: on the house Ill put & mortgage And take just one more ride. Now Yok Evening Mail WOMEN OUTLIVE MEN If you Cant Boost, Dont Knock Women live longer thafl men , and both men and women of today are living longer than they did in the past, according to figures for tho 1920 federal census just made public. enuThe number of centenarians inau was 1920 4267, merated iu crease of 712 in ten years. Although the males outnumber the females. in the population as a whole, as there were 2706 women in tho centenarian class, compared with 1561. men. Project No. 10 contemplates a tax HEBES PROOF revision. C. IL White is the leader. It calls for a better tax adjustment A Payson Citizen Tells of His and a continuance of work for an Experience. income tax law. The plan with reYou havo a right to doubt stategard to securing an income tax law is not yet completed. ments of people living far away but can you doubt Payson endorsement! Costs. Bead it: W. H. Bhermer, depot agent, D. & Project No. 11 deals with cost of B. G. By., Second Ward, Payson, production. Three men in each local I have used Doans Kidney mil keep records of cost of small says: Pills for pains in my back and other grain and sugar beets. Each local aches and pains brought on by kid where these crops are grown, will se- ney trouble. . I have always found exFrom-mlect at least three capable men who them-fine remedy. will keep a cost record. The county perience with Doans Kidney Pills, I bureau will snpply blanks for this dont hesitate in saying they are know of. purpose and the county agents will the best kidney remedy I Results Lasted. check the records. Mr. Almost seven years later, In addition to these projects each I havent had any of Shenner added: local will select special pieces work to do in accordance with their further need of a kidaey remedy Doans since I last recommended . respective needs. Kidney Pills. Dont Price 60c, at all dealers. A cranks theory often needs only ask fbr a kidney remedy get simply a rivet or two more to become a Doans Kidney .Pills the same that Foster-Milburvaluable discovery. St. Louia . Globe. Mr. Bhermer had. Democrat. Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. ft r Knocking Never Got a City Anywhere Payson Commercial Club y n coxc i v fv |