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Show ' I y r ? k VOLUME XXXin NUMBER PAYSON, 13 8 to the Letter Emphasizes the City Council - ; i Aldermanic Body Refuses to Change Law So As to Permit Boys of Eighteen Years to Frequent Members of Council Resorts. are Emphatic on Subject. - A have Beg&TdIeas of appeal which been made to member of the city council for a change in the ordinance governing the operation of pool rooms the ago at which boys way be permitted to trequen such resoits in i 'ay sou will not be changed. Xhi-yitue deteiiuiuation ot the council Mouua at the special meeting las as i. me orUinauce remains u.gut. was ongiuuiiy and boys unUer twenty ouo yea is 01 age will not be peruu ted to patronize the pool rooms oi i ayson. rue question was introduced b At ay or Charles M. White, who saiu mat it was a shame o allow vioiu. trous of the city oidiuances, and it wus the decision of the council that tr an incumben city marshal faiis to enforce the ordinance to the utmost of his authority, a marshal shall bo appointed who can uphold the law. , 7 L i Councilman W. H. Shermor opposed changing the law to permit boys of eighteen years to fTequent pool rooms and said that the law must be enforced. Councilman Fred W. Tanner reverted back to the time before prohibition and to the time when pool halls were permitted to tube the of the saloon. Mr. Tanner place said that .he never was in favor of licensing pool halls and that they were permitted only in order that certain persons might have a chance to make a living. He emphasized the tact that evil associations go hand in hand with pool hall and that recently the biakes had been released entirely. If I had the making of the ordinance,' said Mr. Tanner, I would lix the minimum age limit at fifty us 4 4 r 4r years. Councilman Flint C. Dixon was in favor of allowing the ordinance to remain as it is. Coaneilmaa Dave Shuler said that he haa slightly favored reducing the age limit to eighteen years, on the ground that less violations would result. He advothe law to cated, however, enforcing y the letter.' Councilman-SidneCoray said that he believed in fixing' the age limit at a figure which can be enforced. If the present age cannot be enforced, place it an age where it Mr. Coray. He s&ic can, declared that he would not favor eighteen years unless the ordinance were uniform in all towns and cities of the county. ' PAY80NIAN8 ATTEND DEMONSTRATIONS AT PKOVO MANY 4-- C f COMMISSIONERS TO DE GUESTS OF COMMERCIAL Appeal to ha Made Construction for JANUARY 27, 1922. IS I PEICB, FTVE CENTS-- HURTFUL GOSSIP STAMPED IRRIGATION TAXES MUST BE PAID SAYS COUNCIL AS DANGEROUS TO CITY Pool Room Ordinances Just Be Enforced UTAH, THE CLUB Immediate of Payson Benjamin Road. The members, of he board ot county commissioners of Utah county will be the guests, of the Payson Comoieial club next Thursday evening at a banquet at the Strawberry hotel. It is requested that every member of the club be presnt as a number of matters of vital importance to Pay-so- n will come up for consderation. One of the paramount questions will be that of the county road from Payson through Benjamin to connect with the concrete road ending at the sugar faetory at Leland. The boaird of county commissioners will be urged to at once begin prapamtory operations toward building the road, so that actual work of construction may begin early in the spring. Emphasis will be placed on the faet that there is now in Utah county road fund f lOD.OoO, realized from the bond issne cf several years ago, primarily provided for the building of the road. This money being immediately available, an effort will be made to impress on the members of the board the need of expending it at this time for the dual purpose of providing a concrete road and of giving employment to the several hundred idle men in this part ot the county, thus relieving & situation which is fast becoming intense. Commissioner Joseph Reece has ex. pressed himself as favorable to begin building of the road at once and it is believed that Commissioner James Gardner will take a similar view of the situation. COMMERCIAL CLUB ELECTS OFFICERS FOB THE YEAR ' t At a meeting of the board of direct-tor- s list Wednesday evening Karl F. Keeler was chosen president of the Payeo Commercial club, John Done was elected and Lee B. Taylor was ehosen secretary-treasure- r t, A campaign of activity is being worked out which promises to be of Scores of workers from the three greater aid than ever before in ad. w ards of Payson have been in Provo vaneiag the, business, industrial and during the week attending the splen- farming interests of Payson. did lectures, demonstrations and meetings held in connection with Leader'Mrs. William Farrer of Provo was ship Week. Among those who were visiting among her Payson friends there the early part of the week on Tuesday. were President Joseph Reece, Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. White, Mrs. Jt A. Loveless, George Staheli, J. A. INCOME TAX IN NUTGarner, Harrison Hurst, 8. D. Moore, SHELL. Mrs. Enos Simons, Mrs. John Lewis, Mrs. J. C. McClellan, Mrs. John Beid, WHO! Single persons who had Mrs. Joseph Bates, Mrs. Albert Ashnet income of l,OOo or more, by, Mis, Pearl Jones, Mrs. A. L, or gross income of $5,000 or H. R. Mrs. Mrs. Curtis, Clayton, more. Married couples who Laban Harding, Mrs. A K. Huish, net had income of $2,000 or Mrs. Mrs. Eva Miss Drake, Clayson, more, or gross income of $5,. L. A. Coray, Reece, Mrs. Sydney 000 or more. Hill, Rulon Hill and Mrs. Lee R. WHEN! March 15, 1922, is fin' Taylor. al date for filing returns and making first payments. BOY SCOTJT8 TO GIVE WHERE. Collector of internal BIG HARD TIME DANCE revenue for the district in which the person lives cfl- - has If being a man, you have no over, his principal place oi busialls or Khaki breeches, or being a ness. woman you have no house dTess ot HOWt Full directions on Form will behoove or it calico, gingham 1040A and Form 1040; also you to hie yourself at once to the the huw and regulations. store and arrange to have those habWHATf Four per cent normal iliments for the big hard time dance tax on taxable income up to to be given on Wednesday night ot in excess of exemption $4,000 next week at the Payson pavilion Eight per cent normal tax under the auspices of the Payson on balance of taxable income. Boy Seouts, aided by the M. L A. Surtax from 1 per cent to 65 collar linen bilod a shirt, Wih per eent on net incomes or a dress of expensive material yon over $5,000 for the year 1921. will be decidedly out of place. Everyone i9 Invited, rarabve to ' discourage of minors which may in a united effort tr ciieulation p.ove uoictoreous to the iinauuial ana business interests of Payson, such as nave been cunent Uuiing the past tew citizens have weeks, the foremost t' gone on record as discountenancing anything ot that character, by fixing " ihuir signatures as follows; Wo the undersigned have noticed a glowing tendency on tho part of some of our citizens of tho community, to Utah-Idah- o Declares gossip icgut ding tho condition of our Official of W o are iiuiuicuii mstitutious. that in most cases the parties Beet Receive talking have not the proper regaru ' Per for lor the community interests. As a ; " ' i matter of fact anything affecting our v t bank8 affects our community one and Favors Protection. 'fl1 ll ull. Our institutions have served us well in tho past and there is no good icasoii why they will' not continue to Fanner should be paid a serve us in tho same manner. We $6 a ton for their beets, and have no more reason to doubt the CIRCULATION OF can be done under 'normal conditions, COUNTY EQUIPMENT NOT stability of them than we have had ' said btephea E. Hove m uuumsaiug USED IN CLEARING STREETS in the past. Then why all this talk RUMORS IS FALSE a meeting at the vowmerciai club iu which does no one any good and may lake a few day age upon su harm ub all! Ag good citizens let us the recent snowstorms u During from the east waere OFFENSE SERIOUS Don 8. it. stop Joseph lieeco, Pago, travelers from the north heralded William D. several weeks oeioie tue ilaunce comDixon, V. E. Ellsworth, storie to the effect that snowplows Thomas E. mittee ot congress in - an effort to Reece, A. P. Smith, Ken. show hat bqdy the belonging to Utah county, operated ueth J, Tanner, B. F. Ott, R. of a at the expense of the county, hud A. Porter, Elisha Brown, L. A, Hill, State Bank Examiner FUee Commun- nigh tariff on sugar innecessity order that the cleaned the snow from the side warns sugar iudustry in tne United H.ates ication Bearing on Grave P, Harmon Hurstr, A. 1L Powell, A. of Spanish Fork and Springville. C. ' , ' ' ay be protected. Chailes H. Melvin White, Pago, These stories were received with a Situation. the if producers can get five and Wilson, John H. Francoin, W, H. one half cents a pound tor sugar, degreat deal of criticism by the people Shcrnicr, L. D. Stewart, C. E. Me of Payson who felt that this city clared Mr. Love, the farmer can be M. A. Seat, J. S. Bills, Jr., J, Beth, had been discrimminated against foi C. rumors Anent certain paid at least $6 a ton for beets, it W. R. Heaton, J. C. Cra disturbing Barney, the reason that county funds were Bank which have been circulating around prices are preiuited to coutrauo on vena, Charles O. Staik, State not expended in removing the snow the slump, he said, the sugar comof Payson, Leo R. Taylor, Adalbert ho state recently the 1'iorn Payson streets. concerning K. Huish, A. R. Wilson, Karl F panies eanuot operate at a profit and and luvlustiiul situation, and w iu be forced to Investigation developed he fact Keeler, J. C. Ellsworth and Owen L. iluuiH-iago out of business. that neither had snowplows belonging Harnett. 1 just calling uuuultou to me lact tuu tuc recently returned from to Utah county been used in rernov. Mr. Love, wild 1 usfiiugton, eiicuiaiing or sucli minors cousulues ing the snow from the sidewalks 'of UNIVERSITY SERVICE a g.ave oucnso against luv iuw or ..pealed before the finance cominiiee ouiiX of the United States uc wod, buff i ixou, slam Spanish Fork or Springville, nor bad senate. Some EXTENDS TO PUBILO MUSIC i any of the work been done at county examiner, lias . sent liic roliuwtug of the quejjtions tho were asked me jxpense. there, especially by one of the sena J. U. Folk songs, trio tic songs and pop. loinmuiitcauou to the i'aysoniau: mouths tots from New Fork, have caused lie , past seveml w ill be iiuiiug ular to the pco songs taught LOCAL DRAMATIC COMPANY reports now various pa its of the me to wonder what the common, of- - Utah communities together ORGANIZED lit PAYSON pie nave reached this otfice to the every-daoiaie people 'really hink about with special courccs in art applied to eueet tha unscrupulous persons are ougar industry.' anrecent the a home, according to With a view to presenting some of Mr. Love then began with the atti-uri- c about Hie condition of , the the best of modern plays .n Payson, nouncement by the University of gossiping of the sate. taken by tho sugar manufacuuuuciai institutions division. a drmatie company was oragnized Utah Extension we .have investigated when the United States enter. these charges ture from This the service grows last Tuesday evening at the home of to tbe vqL and Joath tire r that sad.fnllonni hh bigtory--- f reports say Utahpeople are more nave not been Mr. An 'Mrs. 'David Mitchell. The conviction that the indiratry to tho present time. altogetner groundless, in ad interested than the passingly following were elected as officeis. P. it has been publicly stated Ho said hat this industry in Idaho in Edmund equate expression of beauty in their hutfact, C. Wightman, president; tho closing of one bank was .tad Utafi produced more then 4,000,-ooW Professor Fred said lives, Evans, stage director, and Enos W. daily directly chargeable to unwarranted bugs of oqonr loit year and dis- Reynolds, head of tho University talk Simons, publicity manager. on the part of irresponsible per- tributed $37,500,000 among the beet extension department. Mr. Evans brought from California way interested in growers, and that i could .continue Tho instruction in music will in- sons, not in any Willard Mackn play Smoother Than to work and would work if ft oonkl the bank. which there in clude music Silk. which probably w.U be the community invesi-gfffcrwi- s Our reasons for get 5 12 ooats n pound for sugar. making first play produced by the club. In will be laboratory practice in conare: first, tho interests of the well as as mass Binging, War Profits this play Mr. Wightman will once ducting and in- depositors must bo safeguarded again be seen ia a emotional role, musieal appreciation which will talk of this cbaracer is very in. We worked for small profits durhe will be supported by a strong cast. clude the study of great masters and not only to the depositors of ing the war, Mr. Love said . Wo Plans are being laid for the pre- will familiarize tho people with music jurious the bank but to he entire commun- did what wo could o . help, because sentation of a play every two weeks. of our own day. A special feature of the work will bo a course for ity in which the bank is located, we wanted the war to turn out ns nil a forced closing of solvent true Americans did. The boot Miss Anna Wride was the guest of mothers. This will consist of the through sugar also every bank in the men agreed to gell institution; life. child of of shower songs sugar for the same teaching honor at a farewell' party and Art in the home will be studied state is affected indirectly more or price hat the Caban sugar brought,' on Wednesday evening given by her 8ccoud, tho law must be up- - which was $7.25 per hundred pounds. with and her special attention to artistic use mother, Mrs. L. B. Wnuc, held. It is against the state luw to This was in tho face of the costly furnsisters. Close friends and relatives of color and design in tho home; circulate any untruth and derogatory production here, while it coot but and in beauty dress; pictures were numbered among tho guests. iture, rcmaiks relative to financial institu- $1,431.2 a hundred pounds to Miss Wride left on Thursday worning and decorations. produce tions. "-vsugar in Cuba, with 27 2 coats for for California. One section of the .banking law Miss Camilla Francom extended transportation to this country. This recites; was the first year, we wore - in' tho her a to was her Allie Webb Miss group pleasantly hospitality who wilfully or war. The next year, which wae 1919, person at on Any friends her of number a Sunday young evening young surprised by or makes circulates or vo were allowed to knowingly school friends Sunday evening. ehargo and did transmit to another or others, charge $9 for n hundred pounds. Wo made suck a small profit oa tkis that any statement or remark written, printed or by word of mouth, my company had o draw a its rewhich is untrue in fact and is serve in order to meet 8 per eent directly or by inference duroga. dividends. This reserve was... cut from $1,500,000 to a little more. than tory to the financial condition or affecting the eolvency or finan1,000,000. cial standing of any bank, or Mr. Love then old of the efforts . who knowingly to have the administration counsels, aids, buy . the 1920 sugar crop of Cuba as it had to procures or induses another done the year before and hew ''this state, transmit or circulate any such statement or rumor, is guilty lan was stopped by tho adtBiaijtra After weeks of work on the part the north west corner of tho pavilion of a misdemeanor punishublo by tion. As a result, he said, England of the Junior clans, the pavilion look, where a ceiling of wild roses and fine of not more than $1000.00 or France and Germany bought - this ed us best on the night of the Prom. walls covered with paper of similar : tho more not for for a in made roses wild tone bower of vast by imprisonment a was background sugar. During this time the governIt or thun one both. couches which with ment effects and chairs in easv the Unied States continued conventional and appliqued year It is tho sacred duty of every to establish the price of sugar until the nowest fashion in the art world. the room was fitted. For once crepe paper was entirely Mary G. Jensen, who was the de- citizen to uphold and sustain the all the sugar was sold. Then ' the sub- signer of last years exquisite prom laws of our state. Especially is this government, and most bo speaker said, turned unusual a and forgotten stantial effect of great beauty was decorations, was once more at the oxpccted of its officials. Tho State tho market loose. The priee here committee. Hanking department fully senses their had been 10 the result. The hall was not orna- head of the decorating cents a pound, but mented but really decorated as toe She designed not only the pavilion responsibility to the public and will when the government let go, it went color scheme and the decorations ornamentation but also the dancing not tolerate anything that imperils as high as 35 cents a pound. ' seemed to add beauty to tho hall it. programs which were painted by the tho safety of bank deposits. Price Falls Rapidly. This statement is not made as a self rather than to stand out as new girls of the Junior class. The firm threat A as a leaves but that printed the interior kindly warning. patches on old garments. this At Love said, point, The walls were covered with hugo of these programs said that to his hint to the wise should suffice. I took the bull by the horns and Yours school prom very truly, panels of gold colored paper on which knowledge no city high advanced the price of sugar here to SETH FIXTON, roses and leaves appeared in ' appli- had ever had programs so elaborate the market value. Had I not taken State Bank Commissioner. this action, our qued designs. So well did the color- or artistic. company would have Dated at Salt Lake City, Utah, been We had the best music that has ing match the pavilion and so neatly bankrupt. Then, for, threo 1922. were the panels applied that they ever been furnished at any Protn, January 26, was shipped into the months, sugar seemed a part of the hall itself. syncopated foxsnappy United States countries that had Information has been received of no The ceiling was a vast shower of trots and lullaby waltzes by the righ to be doing this. There flowers and leaves interepered wiah dance artists Rube and Dube ably the death at Colorado Springs, Cplo., wero 880,000 tons shipped into this gold and rose panels matching the assisted by their co.players. Only of John Lantz, father of Ira T. country. Then, our ' sugar when 14. side effects. Fourteen Jingo chande- high class dance hits of ls21 and 1922 Lautz of thig city, on January went on the market, the botom drop elimiJazz liers composed of flowers, leaves and were used, absolutely Immediately on receiving he news pod out and manufacturers and whole-- , Mr. and Mrs. Lantz left for Colorado sale dealers were rose colored balloons were a beauti- nated. caught with large The dance itself was a booming Springs but arrived there too late ful feature of the ceiling decoration. on hand for which they quantities On the band stand t... same panel success because from some of the for tho funeral. The body was taken had paid prices which they could not effect was carried out together with expressions of the dancers it conld be to Shell Rock, Ida., for burial. Mrs. to realize. I know of one man hope noverhad Lnnz will remain with her daughter who had 50,000 bags of sugar on the writing of tho class numerals in discerned that they had was such a good time. Juniors From tho stand- Edith, until spring. Mr. and Mrs. which he roses. The word 'lost $12 a bag. Hundreds similarly spelled out in the north end point of finance it was thoroughly Lantz will visit friends and relatives of men went bankrupt as a result. successful as the Junior class cleared in Iowa an Colorado before returning of the hall. A cozy rest room was provided in quite a sum of money. home. (Continued on Page 8.) Action toward the collection of delinquent irrigation tiu.es will shortly be taken by the city oi Payson ac cording to the determination of the city council in special session last Monday night. The Hooks show, as reported by the committee, that at the present time there is delinquent more than $4,000, some of the water users not having paid their taxes for several years, it was reported that some had gone so far as to declare that they uover would pay their water taxes. It was the suggestion that if it is impossible to collect irrigation water taxes, steps would be taken to ineor. porate the water, which would relieve the situation. Mayor Charles H. White announced that h would make appointments to fill vacancies in city offices next Monday night. I ho For Preservation of ' fe , Sagar Indusbry Says Love cou-ince- d the $6 That Sugar Company Grower Should at Least Ton His Products. S3 ' .. - l y Ahft-lTT- - o . . 1-- her-hom- . Junior Prom is Grandest Success of the Season - 1-- 2 1 .r. onc-stcp- IWVEMSJ9P |