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Show THE PAY90NIAN, PAYSON, THE PAYSONIAN Issued Ereiy Friday at )T the PAYSONIAN people, and not a few agitators, are going to continue to run thia country,' for the people n(-- paying the Pay son, Utah, bill. PUBLISHING CO. SUBSCEIPTION BATES Year, in Advance Six Months in Advanee One 2.50 1.2S Entered at the Poetoffice at Pay eon, Utah, as second class matter. W. E. ELLSWOBTH, Editor and General Manager. THE PEOPLE With STILL BULL. Internal Revenue Collector Does Not Issue Brew Permits e stop-watc- h t. ibt-e--agai- stop-watc- per-cen- s onc-hal- J1 fy f ,. .r't-'fkrf- e v -r ;V -- XT' rauininujS 9 s M e Car That Meets all Winter Requirements i Let us give your Ford the once J over before winter sets in. ''ti.. Lf . '4f FULL LINE OF FORD PARTS , ' '"V . - 5K--;v:- L,- r L SHULEIL MOTOR COMPANY k V 1. ,il i t ac - HIGHLY PAYSON,- - UTAH 14, 1921 ATTENDANCE Washington, I). C. According to cinsiis of 1920 there are 74,937 children 7 t0 13 years of age in the state of L'lali and of this number 71, fill or 00.3 per cent were reported as attending school. In 1910 the attending school was 91.fi increase plus showing !l gratifying as regards school attendance between 1010 and 1920. Of the children 14 and 13 years of age in 1920, 93.7 per cent were attending school nnd of those 10 and 17 years of ago 71.4 'r cent. Tho percentage of children attendwas approximately the ing schools same i the cities ami country dis triets, tlie percentage for children in the urban population 7 to 13 years of age being 93. K while ia the ruial Urban' populalio,, it was 93.3. according to the census definition in eludes all cities and other incorporator ed places of 2,300 population the ESSENTIAL Form; War Board Man OCTOBER UTAH SCHOOL MARINE TO OUR PROSPERITY In- - Says dustry Cannot Live Without Foreign Trade. Through the filing of several applications with the collector of internal revenue for permits to heads of families to manufacture wine, arising from an idea gained through advertising letters and newspaper articles, it is deemed proper to give the Further (le following information. tails under tho national prohibition act may be obtained from the bu rcau of internal revenue, if desirod. Tho office of the collector of internal revenue does not issue permits for tho manufacture of wiue, home brow, distilled spirits, or any other intoxicating liquors for beverage use in the home or elsewhere, and, under the law, cannot issue such permits. Non intoxicating fruit juice can be made in the home. Intoxicating wine, homo brew, and distilled spirits may not be made. A munufucturer of fruit juices may make and sell the same, paying a tiux of ten per cent on tho salo price. If the person engaged in tho bumness of manufacturing non intoxicating fruit juices for the market is tho head of a family, such producer may obtain aj permit 200 gallons thereof to manufacture for the use of his own family, without payment of tax. Such fruit juieo must not be sold or otherwise removed from the place of manufacture. If tho manufacturer be not the head of a family, or if, being a mar riod man, he is living apart from his family, or if the manufacturer be a iwrtnorship, it permit cannot issue to exempt the manufacturer from the tax on the amount of fruit juice railroad stake threatened some polrtieiaas, as w eli as souie labor leaders appear to overlook the fact that though the rail roads were returned tu private con toi the public is still the bills caused by artihcral paying rules, regulations and wage scales forced on tire railroads for political purposes. Iu all countries the price of commodities has beoir lowered and wages have beea revised downward. ,o United States farm products are lowerin- '- price thau for many years and the price of other uecets-saniof life hus been shaiply reduced. Wages of labor generally have been lowered in consonance with reduced cost of living. Justice dictates that all be treated alike, But . railroad labor, which is tire highest paid of all, brasenly says that changes iu wages and working conditions will not be accepted. Not only does this class of labor retain war wages but propose also fifty per cent more for all time after eight hours. Not long ago wheu the shadows of the great war were gathering on horizon element our this sumo hand iu with the of forced pussage tho Adamson law with threats of a named. strike, a surrender of governmental This tax exemption to the manufacpower as humiliating to tho public who is also the head of a famturer as it was subversive of popular have been the source of conmay ..No president or congress ily The effect of the exemption fusion. put the pa is not to allow the manufacture of oleranco of the peoplo to 200 gallons of intoxicating win free such a test. from the restrictions of the national The situation has entirely oliung-eprohibition net, but merely to allow is a siiieo then. The producer to manufacture 200 gallons now being held by the public, more of fruit juices free radical labor of tax. determined than the oligarchy ever was that exploitation Tho law does not allow the manu of the public shall cease. faeture, without a permit, of beer, Strike or no st riko tile public is ale and porter, even though the al determined that wages and working eoholie content be less than one half renditions of railroad employes shall of one t of alcohol by volume, be readjusted downward ns in other The only persons issued permits for industry, and that working ngreo-merit- the manufacture of cereal beverage which permit railroad employ- are of dealcoholizing proprietors draw pay when not actually es t nleohol industrial plants and plants, working, or fifty jer cent moro than vinegar factories using the vaporizing their piesent high rate for all time process, all of whom mny manufacture, after eight hours, shall he cancelled. commercially only cereal beverage The public is watching closely the of one containing less than attitude of the U. H. railroad labor per cent of alcohol by volume. board. If this board tnkes tho necIt is illegal to furnish stills, parts essary action in revising wages and of stills, worms or coils, malt exin elminmting from working agree- tract or syrups, unfermented fruit which ments provisions permitted juices, such as gme must or any such abuses as overtimo after the fermentable material, recipes or forfirst eight hours at time and a half mula, for tho manufacture of liquor whether sleeping or working, the for use in the home or elsewhere for If it fails beverage purposes. public will sustain it. the public will not only condemn it All alcohol, brandy, whiskey, mm, hut very probably wipe it out. t gin, boor, ale, porter and wine arc The people will not bo trifled with intoxicating liquors, regaVdless of i ither or the by railroad employes content, and it is illegal to hoard. They w faeture them without a permit, 'erred, ns in the days of nder the provisions of law, the hv M'r 2f0 gallons of fruit juice which may piano there never wns a bo produced by a manufacturer withThe out payment of tax must, like ntiy time e to clean house. filled 4s and further quantity produced for home men idle with .onj?Wr will be plenty to fill all va-- ' use without n permit In the second placo the fancies. aj MERCHANT UTAH. Prevention of unemployment in the future depends upo the extension of our foreign trade, and that can be extended only through an American mcichant marine. This view of economic conditions is vigorously expressed by J. A. Von Dohlen, of Charleston, S. C., a mem bor of the war industries board dur- more. AVn-According to ngtou, D. ( ing the war and now traffic manager of the Carolina Line an Aiuermuu the census of 1920 there are fi,9fi4 of age ocean concern whose illiterate peisoas tea years, transport i! over in the state of Utah, and steamers ply between ports of the literate to unable write meaning, United States and Europe. Mr. Von in any language. Of this number, Dohlen concisely and forcefully sums 323 are native whites of native par 390 are of foreign or mix up the job ahead of the peoplo of entngo, eil parentage, and 3,304 are of for the United States in tho establish meat of n American merchant mar- eign birth, 1,240 are Indians, 39, nr" Negroes and the remainder, 327, are ine. Asho says, Chinese or .Tajmnese or other Ours is a big country, ten the In total iatics. population and while we have a tremendous sea coast tho preponderance of our years of age and over the percentage of illiteracy is 1.9 which shows a population lies in the interior far re It is to these decrease since 1910, when it was 2.3. moved from shipping. There is more illiteracy in the rural peoplo that the . story must bo enr of the state than in the districts we told must if ried. be that They the percentages being 2.3 for cities, are to be a great nation we must lural the population and 1.3 for the stop swapping dollars with ourselves the native white pop For urban. and extend our trade to every port uhition of native parentage the urin tho world. is 0.3 To do this we cannot depend on ban percentage of illiteracy rural is 0.4. the while Foreign ships flying foreig,, flags. By counties the jieicentage of il flag ships have been built, operated, San from 20.9 in and are subsidized by their govern- literacy ranges av no 0.1 in .ieh and ments t0 extend the trade and com Tuan county to counties. inerce of their countries, not ours. Their operation from ports in the to D. C. According United States is only incidental to theWashington, census of 1920, 37.7 per cent, or their service. of the people in tlie almost state of Utah are either, infants or We Must Operate our Ships. children under 13 years of age; 9.7 We We have built 3,700 ships. Hr cent are young people 13 to 19 With them we vears old; 33. S per cent, over one must operate them. AVe must establish trade routes. third, me men and women in the must make it possible for our imlus prime of life, being from 20 to 44 tries to sell their products in every years old; whie 10.7 pi'r cent, beThis w ill be par of the world. ing 43 years of age aiul over, are only possible by inaugurating and well along in middle life if they maintaining trade routes from all sec have not reached old age. tions of this country to all sections Tho uiban populatio,, as compared of the world. with the rural shows some rather This will cost money; lots of striking differences in age, the per money, but I take it that we are ns cent a ge 20 to 44 years of ago being well prepared as a government to 3S.5 for the hurbnn population ns maintain the American flag on a compared with 32.4 for tho rural, merchant fleet today' as Germany, while the percentage under 13 years Holland, Great Britian and the other of age is 33.3 in the urban populaforeign nations were fifty years ago. tion as against 41. S in the rural. If we are not prepared to stand the These differences may indicate larger nnd mnin- - families of children i the country expense of establishing ma Amorienn merchant tabling an than in urban communities, but prob rine in regular trade routes over a ably indicate the influx of adult period of years, I ask you are we foreign immigrants in cities and the prepared to see our industries close fact that the native children as they down and the products of our farm grow up, have likewise a tendency to and forest rott migrate to the city, thereby increasAA'hen tho war broke out in Eu- ing the active adult city population rope, and long before our entry into at the expense of the rural districts. About one half of the population, it, we had in the United States an overproduction to meet the demands 30.9 per cent, are old enough to vote, from across tho sea, our industries being 21 and over; and in this class nt that time doubled their capacities the me,, outnumber the women in tho The males of a tre- ratio of 112 to 100. and when we entered the r mendous amount of new industries military age, 13 to 44, eonsitute In my 39.9 per cent of the male population were built in this country. connection with the war industries nnd 20.fi per cent of the total board I had oeeasion to look into this These great new indusintimately. tries were housed in new buildings INTERNATIONAL PIANIST TO APPEAR IN PROVO of concrete and steel. They were orsioned by the war emergency to be master had nevertheless sure, but they Leopold Godowsky, world come to stay, and after the armistice pianist, will appear at the Taber we found ourselves in the United naele in Frox-o- , Friday, October IS. States not only with the overproduc- at R:13 p. m. Undoubtedly this is tion that' we had when we entered one of the greatest musical opportunithe way, but with an over plus pro- ties, under the direction of the Brigduction nnd tho question today is ham Young university Lyceum course, what are we going to do with it that the public of Utah county will have for somo time. Foreign Trade and Merchant Marine Nelson of the Professor F.lmer In my judgment there is only one Brigham Young university music deanswer, foreign trade and an Ameri- partment, whn was a student under can merchant marine. Godowsky in Seattle two years ago, If you can carry the story to the says the Godowsky without doubt is this country the worlds greatest pianist and adds 100,090,000 people in that their success lies in foreign that piano students should gpt more an artist such trade, if you can make them believe put of listening to that tho employment of all the peo ns Godowsky than in several months plo all tho time depends on the ex- of study. tension of our foreign commerce, nnd Godowsky states in a recent article that our foreign commerce can only in musical Ameria, that ho believes be extended through the vehicle of an in giving in concert programs, sov America merchant marine, you will oml unknown works, and novelties; have accomplished a great work, and both to give these a hearing nnd to. the peoplo should not lose sight of perhaps interest a so called unmusical tho fact that no foreign government audience and also to render a few has built up a merchant manno with- classics nnd old faxoiifes to delight of musical students. out lending financial Assistance, nnd the Tienrt lending it generously. DOES IT PAY TO WORRY YOUNG LOVE ABOUT APPENDICTIS? Bright New Aluminum Nothing looks so well in Kitchen Ware. Nothing so easy to keep clean. Another feature is the long life and no repair bills. We have in a new assortment at prices that will please you. DOUBLE BOILERS PERCOLATORS SAUCE PANS KETTLES, ETC. hi -- A 50c to $1.75 . Farmers Merc. Co-o- p PAYSON, UTAH ki.&;CKKBEBBBIXHHHIHIiaMBaMiaiaaaHaBiaBHIIIIB Toilet Preparations s Excelsis Superior to all Others Face Powder, Face Creams, Dandruff Eradicators, Extracts, Etc. EVERYTHING FOR MILADYS TOILET 10 Mrs. Mendenhalls Millinery Next Door to Postoffice cxoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo&$& Home for Sal Six acres within the City linvftgfSroom house, Electric Lights, Water ahd Good Improvements, Good Garden and ClpKen lun, with Chickens. Will 41lust be disposed of at once. Trade or Sell. Inquire at the Paysonian Office 00000000000000000000000000000000 ooo Y Can bo appendicitis guarded in sgaiimt I Yes. by preventing fesfionnl antiseptic, Adler iks m . on BOTn upper ami lower bmvel re moving ALL foul, deeming m.ttir hioh miglif stnrt infieti,.., i GET T.FNT for gas on s hronie T . enntipntini matter which you never t ought was in vour system and wifi., nothing else can dislodge. O,,, sports is nnbeliex aide th, jmpuri- ies dler i k;i brovg' B. F. f. L' 'ITT, Dmggist. ishment is exptvssly prescribed, is Miss There isnt merh difference beguilty of a misdemeanor. Tenbtirg .was released from custody tween siht n,i.i , Lio,,. except when when she promised to be good and vou make the mistake 0f calling a ot ride in Snyders car. woman one when vou the other. mean At j i 1.1 13X33 two-fifth- s Mrs. Frederick Snyder of Colden Hill, near Goshen, N. Y., objected to Miss Alice Tenburg, a good looking miss of IS, going motoring with hoi husband and him, and vamping The arrest hnd the girl arrested. was made under Section 43 of the general provisions of tho penal law of New York, which provides that a person, who wilfully and wrong fully commits any act which seriously injures the person of property of another or which openly outrages public decency, for which no other pun- . Health Comfort Economy health ef your family Safeguard the and warm cosy with hor always POLEC V, ORIGINAL HOT BLAST HEATER Gives even steady heat daylflb'iTq-thold fire 36 hours, and will burr any Remember, this is the Original Hot yom fUei guaranteec to save many imitations, but only one Original Hot Blast one-thir- d Gont ir May while 0Ul s1qcl b oompieic. Colvin-Ree- ce Company PAYSON, UTAH |