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Show THE PAYSONIAN, JXXX00X00XX000X 0000XK00CKXK0X Mountain country of infinite charm masses of clouds are swept across the From Little faces of those frowning giants; lies at our very doors. 1oint to Monument Point, oniltuv-olpines are iasluhil with the ' which Powoll built his cairn of rock very fury of the elements, overlooking three states, and on tO( Walk the next morning through blow-up- . the Mammoth with its paradise of Ch f woods that skirt the wfiaiks ami rolling woodland, with its it roses or scent of wild be the lfly Breaks in all this the delicate appeal of the columbine, Cedar darling vVtfT display of grandeur there is no may bo the ery of young or topography.l hammers waiting to be fed or the of color Years may be spent and the seoniCflurry of the ruffed grouse that in anew. Every needless fear sails from your very open possibilities rumble adds new' delight, every hour foot to the highest branch of that of the day has its own charm, every quaking-asp- , it may be a gleaming month of the year is clothed in a mule deer bounding up the hillside with her faw-nbut whatever it is icw radiance. Climb Ynwikee Bench and ttinfll the effect of such an excursion Is " Drive your that symphony and grandeur exhilarating and restful. that burst suddenly upon the viqw: car to the very shores of Hoosier mountains carved into canyons of lake or to the Yankee meadow and enchanting mystery; an epic hewn a dozen such hikes, each to a now Come from tho everlasting hills; a tracery retreat, will fill a vacation. in stone as bewitching as a Rhcims and make your own discoveries of roams .of beauty, the name whereof cathedral; a very temple of awful of sulemlor. The azure distant no man knoweth. The projected automobile highway nniges robes the vivid vermillion of with its thou-- over the shoulder Navajo the to the sand pinnacles and fretted frieze, cedar breaks and tho Mammoth will majictie Mount Baldy enressed etern- - open up Parowan canyon as a play But a few ally with snow', half seen through a ground for tho nation. its granite miles away Panguitch lake with its curtain of pines lifts wonderful blue spring and its trout height to tho very clouds. Buck of all this looms a vast escarp- of the rarest flavor offers a haven ment of andesite, locally known as for the fisherman. The Mammoth throw n stream itself has miles of excellent The Ledge, ' proteetingly A breeze pools and eddies where the lazy fly around this rugged Eden. Here murmurs gently nml then rustles the tempts llio leaping beauties. x Soon Nature has a storm there is room for all. groves of aspen. breaks, the thunder rolls from crag been lavish with her gifts and those to rrag and reverberates along those who love her will And a generous withstood welcome. Joseph E. Richards in New mighty walls that have Wind driven ,est Magazine. the blasts of ages. cen-Cree- Railroad Chief Declares Freight Ch&iges Not the Cause of idgnalion. j yellow-monoton- y t j s J 1 , second-left-han- 1 d . OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO The Real Cause of Gloom oooooooooooooooooo rOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO from Chile. That country did not like American manners, or goods credits; American salesmen did not understand the people; and as soon as the Chileans could again do biisi ness with England and Germany the Fniteil States would be at the end of its rope. When reminded that Germany, in the cheap and nasty period of her foreign trade, had a similar experience, but worse, ho replied that the business men of the United States did everything in too much of a hurry. He painty did not rialize that lie himself was his own worst, example, insisting on this coun trys accomplishing in Ihreo years what Germany required fifteen years to accomplish. And then, tho railrond problem! Although England, with the same prob lom, is supposed to have her house in order by the Wall street pessimists, America is assumed to be in a post lion where she never can have adequate and profitable transportation again; and without such transporta tion, exports must languish and domestic trado be moribund. If a man wishes to find the real source of gloom, let him go to New York, says George Wheeler Ilinmau The gloom in the Financial Market. After a is there; no doubt of it. Hall few hours south of City park no will wonder further at the sad body The antics of the stock market. wonder for him then will bo that there is any market at all. If glum looks and cynical pessimism could go to greater lengths, it would be inter-eiilto learn how. Even the really good things that appear from day to day with the bad ones, are distorted to swell the bear One subject that is eschorus. pecially tiresome is the German reAnother worn topic is the petitions, South American "trade that is going to Still another s the foolleave us. ishness of trying to compote with Central in England or Germany And still - another is the America. uselessness of trying to do anything until this country's railroad labor sees the light, whatever that may g mean. Some of these sad views entirely contradict one another. If, for instance, Germany is going brankrupt rather than pay reparations which is the favorite argument of those who say we shall never get our government loans back it. would be interesting to know how she going to drive the United Stato? out of all Central and South American markets. Surely if national bankruptcy is the beginning of foreign trado a new era is really here so new that all economic law and precenrent have been stood on end. After the Napoleonic war the bankruptcies on tho continent were was That Englands opportunity. natural. It is vain to ask anybody in Now York what would make a So similar situation unnatural now. many men have ceased to argue, and Confidence is Heeded. What New York needs is a dash of blind American confidence and less and financial introIt needs to look outward spection. and not inward all the time. There is enough gloom to occupy us all, if we refuse to see anything cls,e but it seems a trifle irrational to forget altogether the fact that, in the race of nations just now, the United States is first and the rest nowhere. What seems to be needed is more of the spirit one often finds on the Pacific coast in poor times, whon men cat at soda fountains, sleep in garages and predict the big things in store for them if they do not lose heart.- - In writing of the new United States coal trade with foreign countries, Geoige H. Cushing said last fall: simply mourn! It (America) is engaging in that Saja U. S. Cant Hold Trade. trade now with all the faltering and of the novice. Also, day or two ago the Agues of our bashful antics in Mexico were it with is trade many fitfully experimenting increasing They showed markets in order to find its natural printed iu New York. States place in a lesser number of markets. of United increase ateady from 'll, in .Tune, In tho settling process of the next $10,. ,000 exjxirts in January, 1921.1 two or throe years the American l'.t-to tt, The writer asked two men about this coal trade will find its niehe in the The world market and will fill it. improvement. pleasant little Gerthe till wait Just was: Doing business and insisting on reply thoso Mexicans holding what it gets and constantly mans got started; dont like us; we cant hold their getting more. It is a difficult achievement to "let the next man intertrade. Gerthis spirit from the west to the because was spread viewed gloomy esmans. he thought, 'were getting ready the east, but unless tho oast, Now York, is leavened by a re their pecially money, paper t0 repudiate fuse to pay any considerable repara little straight American hope and res the market for American setwins to the allies, ami therefore go elution, will continue to flutter up curities business domestic out of foreign and down for some time with every and with even of getting the purpose for breeze that blows jrom tho saddest T, . r Ultimo. AiiuUiccAh had just como back capitals of Europe. FARM PRODUCTS Mr. If now find mY wa around! emihl Thm Vmst be embarrassing. It is. Tiie first week I was there I wanted to get rid of an old rat ne had, and my wife got mo to tho river a mile away. And you lost the ent all right t I never would Lost nothing! have found my way home if I hadnt take.i0 followed the eat! Pickup. without going to the of expense court proceedings. Mr. Thats interesting. Styles 'That has she done! Mrs. Styles Why, she sent her s husband out to match a piece of and told him not to return until he had matched it. Hes still out. Yonkers Statesman. dress-good- FIND YANKS BODY PETRIFIED V asiniijjlun, D. C. lu testifying beloru the beanie Lomnnltee uu Interstate Cununeice, which is cuuuueling ail luquuy mtu the railroad situation, Juiius Cji airman of the Board 01 the Southern Pacilic Company, went into great uetail as to the ellect ol freight rates on produce snipmeuts, lorcigu and domestic, ino mam points ne made m this part ol hig testimony were: First That business impression is not the result of hign Height rates; 'Second That the leal cause of stagnation m produce shipments is lack of market or proliteermg. He said, in pan: A widespread propaganda is hemg can led ou to arouse public sentiment against e&tmg freight rales, wmereas the fact is that even since the rates have been advanced the cost ol transporting commodities is far less thairthe toll taken by the commission merchant and Hie retailer for buying and selling them. Public Misted as to Situation People are misled and conclude that high rates have slopped the movement of a large amount of Height and that the railways Krutt-aciini- U, wouid make more money if they would reduce the rates and thereThere is by revive the tralfic. the strongest reason to believe that the very great reduction in traffic has been due almost entirely to general business conditions that are world wide in their eflect, and that would have come if there had been no advance in freight rates. Prices of commodities reached their maximum m the first half of the year 1920 and thereafter fell with great French Miner Discover Corpse of PrL vate of 166th Infantry in Coal Pit Marysville, Ohio. Ralph O. Clark, who served ns a member of Company inE, One Hundred and Skcty-slxt- Harding, Wilson and Taft Appeal to Americans to Help Stricken h fantry, overseas, has received word from France telling of the finding of Millions of S:otcr Republic. the petrified body of Charles Johnson, an American soldier who lost his life overseas. The President and two The was found in an abandoned of the United States have Joined, for coal body mine at Fronchambault, France, the first time In the history of the In the latter part of March. It was country, in nn appeal for a philan- discovered by a crane operator when President Hard ng, thropic enterprise was he with a pick In the coal digging Wilson nnd ex President Tuft are nil in the forefront of the pit. Johnson was returning from a nearmovement to send aid from America to by city with two buddies, when, makthe famine victims of China. ing a misstep, he plunged down Into One of Pies dent llurdtngs first acts after Ills inauguration, taken the abandoned coal mlna and waa when he hud been In the White House killed. His companions were unable to resless than two weeks, was to renew the cue him, and, absent without leave, eat beIn Ills made by api predecessor half of America's sister republic in the they failed to report the accident for East. President Hard ng said In part: fear of being imnished. At this, the earliest practicable moment In my administration, I desire to THIS BOX YELLS FOR HELP add my own to the many appeals which have been Issued heretofore In German Inventor Perfects Contrivance behalf of the starving people of a large Which Sets Off Alarm When sect on of China. Moved. The picture of Chinns distress Is so tragic that I nm moved, therefore, Berlin. German face a to renew the appeal heretofore made new obstacle in a burglars box which a strong nnd to express the hope that the AmerBerlin Inventor lins Just placed on ican people will rontinue to contribute the market. The portable steel box la to this humanltarbin cause as generwith nn alarm which can be equipped ously as they possibly can. set before the lid Is closed. In nppo ntlng the American commitWhen the box is lifted or moved ever tee for China Fnmine'Fund, with his se slightly the alarm sounds and can own immediate predecessor In the be stopped only by unlocking the box White House, ns Taft, one of the members, nnd Thomas W. and adjusting the mechanism which Lament of New York, as chairman, controls the buzzer. Hotel guests are buying the strong President Wilson snld in his proclabox and placing It against their doors mation : Not only In the name of humnnlty, at night or setting it on luggage which but in that of the friendliness which they wish to protect. The boxes are we feel for a great people In distress, produced in various sizes and with I venture to ak that our clt zens shall, alarms varying in strength from an oreven though the tnk of giving Is not dinary buzzer to a gong. today a light one, respond as they can to this distant hut appealing ery for CHEMISTRYS GRAND OLD MAN ofil-ci.- fire-alar- help. rapidity in trance, the United States and the United Kingdom. LIFE SAVING STAMPS The fall in the United Slates began in May, and was rapidly on in September, its way down-graFAMINE VICTIMS when the advanced rates took ellect. Nevertheless tralfic did not drop for at least four months. Smmp Not Caused by Higher Rates Each Mercy Sticker Purchased it was a general deliatmn and for Three Cents Provides Food fall in prices lrom the heights to which they had been driven by for One Day for a Chinese. var conditions that has caused stagnation of business throughSales of "Life Raving Stamps" by That it is not out the world. the American Committee for China jaused by the cost of transportation is convincingly shown uy the Famine Fund for the benefit of China fact that stoppage of buying has' famine v ctlms have reached n totnl of jaused an oversupply of ships, thousands of dollnrs at the end of the hence ocean tonnage rates have first month, and already the money Is Been recently at the lowest points actually saving lives In China. Or- their history. Notwithstanding these low rates, ocean traffic shows as great stagnation as rail tralfic, and millions of tons of shipping here and abroad are Many rusting away in idleness. move even ni jommodities would not the freight charges on them sere abolished entirely, because Droducers can find no market. That the decline in business is not iue to prohibitive freight rates is ihowm by the following examples: if lu January or Hits year llie total Faro and tonnage of lines west of Ogden operated by tlie Souiliern Pactric The Company Tell orr 41 per rent. combined Intrastate freight tonnage In Arizona and Nevada declined 50 per e cent ulthough no Increase In the freight rates In those slates bas been aa yet authorized or made embraced This deerea-- e effective. grain, hay and livestock, as well aa ores and other commodities. 1 Intra-atat- Cotton Unshipped for Lack of Markets Of a Tezaa cotton crop or over four million bales, 40 per cent remains unThe average cost of rail marketed. and water ahiptrieut from producing point to Liverpool has been reduced about per 100 pounds In the million face of which about bales of cotton less than normal have been exported to Liverpool. Obviously the freight rate la not responsible for the restricted movement. During September, October, and November, 1020, 45 per cent less rtce, 50 per cent less canned salmon, and 77 per cent leas dried fruit were exported than during the game months of the previous year, although the reduction In ocean rates was substantially more than the Increase in inland rail rates, so that the material decline In the exports of these commodities was in the face of a less aggregate cost of transportation. one-ha- lf -- -- BUY The Case of the Fruit Growers The troubles of the California .emon grower have attracted much attention. He claims he is to shio his product because of the increased freight rates. A removal of all the recent increase of the rate on lemons would not help him. He has a rate by sea through the Panama Canal ot less than naif 48 per cent of the rail rate, yet his lemons are not an-ah- marketed. ders during the first month aggregated more than 10.000,000 stamps, which will moan at the rate of 3 cents for each stamp $200,000 for the Chinese when the complete returns have been made. The stamps are Intended to secure a multitude of small cnntrlbu-- t ons from persons who will not have nn opportunity to contribute in other ways. The campaign for China Is the greatest single philanthropic effort now before the Americun people. Every state In the Union Is now ng In the llfev saving stamp sales, and special committees are at work In more than 2,000 cities throughout the country. The circulation of the stamps Is being effected by sales organizations composed of officers of the Womans Foreign Miss onnry Societies, assisted hy commercial organizations, schools, churches, Boy and Girl Scout Camps, Y. M. nnd Y. V. fraternal Christian Associations, lodges, hotel assoc ations, hoards of education nnd other volunteers Interested In the movement to extend a helping hand to a sister republic in distress. House to house canvassing for the sale of the stamps which are Intended to he placed on the hacks of letters nnd packages lias proved the most effet tive method In the smaller commun ties. In the big cities (he stamps have been sold to business houses, which are using them on their outgoing mall and packages. A nominal quota of ten stamps for every adult has been set hy the comm ttee. hut in many centers tills already lias been passed. If unable to obtain stampS through a local committee write China Famine Fund Committee, Bible House, New York. CHINA LIFE SAVING STAMPS le a The average price of ing the maximum moved in any month in the preceding two years, although it was handled at thp advanced freight rates, and w have heard nolhing as to the coal being produced at. a loss or of the coal mine owners going out of business because of existing of freight rates. The perrenlagp freight charges to value in the FOREST FIRES CAUSE ENORMOUS DESTRUCTION In tlio past ten yean 3,500 burned over tio0,0U0 acre were reported ou tho national forest of tho inturmouiitain district according to district forester R. IL RutOf this numledge of Ogden, Utah. ber, sixty per cent were and the remainder resulted from It cost the forest serlightuing. vice and cooperators nearly half a million dollars to extinguish these fires while the actual loss in timber and forage runs well into the hundreds of thousands of dollars. These figures, says the district when forester, presented in ten year totals, show what an enormous tribute the people of the intermoun-tai- n west pay to forest fires since the tires started by lightof ning burned less than tho total area and caused but a small fraction of the damage done by the fires started by human careman-cause- man-cause- d one-tent- h lessness. In the elmiuation or reduction to the absolute minimum of this latter type of fire the forest service will bend its every enorgy. The cause of every forest fire will be run down by forest rangers immediately after the fire is controlled and where there is likelihood of an offender escaping, special officers will be detailed to collect evideuco and stay with the. case to the end. Besides thio more strenuous efforts on tho legal concluded Mr. Rutledge wo side, shall ondeavor to oducate and e all people using the forests as Prevenito the forest fire danger. tion, after all, is what the forest sorvico wants, not prosecution. ad-ws- PROBATE AND GUARDIANSHIP NOTICES Consult Couuly Clerk or the respective signers for further informaV aj tion. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OP UTAH COUTY, STATE OF UTAH. In the matter of the last will and testament of Georgo W. Smith, deNOTICE TO CREDITORS Creditors will present claims with vouchors to the undersigned, at his office at Payson City, Utah, on or before the Seventh day of September, A. D., 1921. U. A. PORTER, Executor. P. O. Iayson, Utah. First publication, May 6, 1921. LaBt publication, May 27, 1921. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Department of the Interior. United States Land Office at Salt Lake City, Utah, May 18, 1921. Notice ia hereby given that Hugh E. Munday, of Santaquin, Utah, who, ou Judo 15, 1920, made homestead entry, No. 022927, for farm unit B or Lots 3 and 10; SVi SW NEVi, NVVJ4 SEVi, Section 32, Township 8 South, Range 1 East, Salt Lake Mer idian, has filed notice of intention to make throe-yea- r proof, to establish Dr. Charles Frederick Chandler, fa- claim to the land above described, bemiliarly known as Chemistrys grand fore Clerk of the Distriet Court, at old man, is eighty-fou- r years old Provo, Utah, on the 8th day of July, and still doing some of the most Im- 1921. portant work of his life as consulting Claimant names as witnesses: chemist to the chemical foundation. John W. Sullivan, Larse La risen, He is here shown In the laboratory H. W. Gore, and D. F. Sullivan, all engaged In an Important research of Santaquin, Utah. problem. GOULD B. BLAKELY, Doctor Chandler was formerly proRegister. fessor of chemistry at Columbia uniNOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. has been the of versity; president the New York board of health, and Department of the Interior. was one of the founders of the American Chemical society. United States Land Office at Salt Luko City, Utah, May 24, 1921. Turkey Hen Lays. Notice i hereby given that Nora Fulmouth, Ky. Mrs. A. II. Steph- E. Crook, widow of Joseph E. Crook, ens, formerly of this county hut now Jr., of Santaquin, Utah, who, on residing In Kentoitcounty, has a blue January 27, 1920, nuulo homestead turkey hen that laid 80 eggs last entry, No. 019801, for SE NEVi, spring and then raised a brood of Section 27; 8 NW'Vi, E SWVi, young turkeys. SEVi, SV4 NEVi, NEVi NEVi, SecShe lins a bronze turkey hen that be- tion 26, township 10 South, Rango 1 gan laying April 1 nnd laid continu- East, Salt Lako Meridian, has filed ously up to .Nov. 17, a total of 176 notice of intention to make three-yea- r eggs. During all this time the hen did proof, to establish claim to the not show any inclination to set. land above described, before the Clerk of the District Court, at Nephi, Utah, on tho 15th day of July, 1921. Claimant names as witnesses: Sun Cooks Scientists William E. Mendenhall of Spring-ville- , Meals on Novel Stove Utah, and Parker Westover, David H. Crook nnd Elizabeth C. Bonn all of Santaquin Utah. Washington. Advantages of t GOULD B. BLAKELY", the Old Sol cook stove, operated 4 f 2i hours a day on sun heat Register. alone, were explained to tlifc 4 4 NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION National Academy of Sciences 4 here by Dr. (5. (I. Abbot of the 4 Smithsonian Institution. Department of the Interior. The device Is as jet a lux4 United States Land Office at Salt ury, he admitted, hut ndded that I Mr. Abbot had done Lake City, Utah, May 24, 1921. everything ? hut fry on the solar cook stove Notice is hereby given that Eliza4 at Mount Wilson, Cal. He 4 beth C. Senn, of Santaquin, Utah, 4 a can of beans, saying who, on January 28, 1920, mado home4 4 stead entry, No. 019567 for EVh NEVi they were solar cook' stove 4 canned, looked good and "tasted SWVi NEVi, NVi 8EVi,NV4 4 8WVL belter. Section 29; E SEVi, Section 30, The apparatus. Doctor Abbot EV4 NEVi, NEVi SEVi, Section 31, said, wus a "concave, parabolic, Township 10 South, Range 1 East, reflector" cylindric through Salt Lake Meridian, has filed notice which ran a tube of ordinary of intention to make tnree-yea- r proof, cylinder oil to absorb heat from to establish claim to the land above the reflector and then to it npply 4 described, before the Clerk of the the cooking compartment, 4 Distriet Court, at Nephi, Utah, on 4 retaining heat in the oil tho 15th day of July, 1921. over night. Claimant names as witnesses: were Cooking temperatures William E. Mendenhall of Spring-ville- , a automatically regulated hy Utah, and Parker Westover, float device, he said, while a simDavid H. Crook and Nora E. Crook ple clockwork lneehauiMu kept nil of Santaquin ,Utah. the reflector pointed to the sun. d 233 If each person buys ten stamps at a cost of 30 cents, this community will go over its stamp quota. Stamps can be secured from the local China Famine Fund Committee exaut- - or directly from China Famine Fund, early part of 1921 is almost A. Bible House, New York C.ty. the same as it was in 191 fire which ceased. HaP de cantaloupe laid down in New York in the season of 1920 was not quite 11 cents. As they were retailed at about 25 cents, there This. Try Crooked Boston. is a further profit to somebody of 14 rents per cantaloupe. The see Mrs. I this in streets Styles by paper managers of the propaganda for renn They say the that a woman in a western town a general reduction of freight arc frightfully crooked. has hit upon a novel plan of obtain- rates inhave lot sisht of the fact Hub They are. Why, do you that October, 1920, 1,105,321 there I ing a separation from her husband carloads of coal were moved, bewhen I first j Mr. ARE CITED Business Depression and Lack or Demand the Keai 1 rouble $34,-00,0- 00 I?o-to- UTAH, MAT 27, 122L ItlJES REASONS THEE PRESIDENTS t oil DEPRESSION ASK AID FOB CHINA The Mountains of Parowan 0000XXXXXX PAYSON. 4- - !! GOULD . B. BLAKELY, |