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Show V" THK PAYSONIAN. FIT Ktii) Friday, at Fayaou, Utah by the IONIAN FUBKIHUINO m I W KUUJWOBTH K. ami Manager vtbSCRlPTION BATES ..$2.50 Vtur, in Advance ir i i in.- n.ilih, iti ot-ner- Advance... Entered at the I'ostuftice at Pnyaon, ns second elaat matter. I't-.- SUCCESS NOT A CHANCE UTAH, FEBRUARY 11. 1921. -- THE PAYS0N1AN 1 PAYSON STAGE AND SCREEN Is Beware of the Bride, box farce William the popu ,this time in a really legitimate role, comedy at one combining eomedv with serums the Gaiety theatre, mlt Monday act ing the stellar role of Om.i,. Eileen IVrey plays the star Melfords production of night. The Hound I ro,e. and the east includes such that of the fat sheriff l ;i mum p, . Me,-bv inversion, comedy players us Walter Slim Hoover. ft Until, 1 it ll:i in Cooley, Harry Dunkiii-- I will be shown at the (layety theatre son, fiiiie Miller, Ethel Shannon and next Wednesday ami Thnrsdav nights. For the most part (leorge Bantu. the pictuif portrays the intensely Two thousands Soldiers. sailors, ludicrous adventures of a new bride nnd marines were guests recently of itt a masked The comedy is one of Haltimoren bull. most prominent well sustained and the fun often up- photoplay houses at n showing of roarious. The lioad Through the it.aif., Clara Kimball Young's latest pro The lute Civile Fitch undoubtedly dnetion for her Select Star Series, was one of the most successful pinylb-preceding Cheating Cheaters. w One of his his of rights day. picture was chosen as the feature of was comedies most popular for the men ' Thoj()l big free show I and it risky Mrs. Johnson uniform on leave from the joved a long run in New York. This nonr that city. A pltiv has been pirturized Clara Kimball Young picture mount with dainty Millie it is to find a perfectly strange the star and it will be was selected not only because of the (lavcty theatre next ithe high merit of the story, acting. night. !aml production, but also because this Miss Burke is delightfully cast in .eminent star is an established favorShe is a gav charm- ite of the men in the service. this picture. in Baris nnd widow ing Amcicari Miss Young will be seen Friday wins the reputation of being frisky night at the Gtivcty theatre, in her because she is merely uacon vent iowil. latest Select licture, Cheating But she has a bruvo heart as she Cheaters, adapted from Max she when saves her sister ciiis proves of tbe reeeit stage from scandal at the risk of the loss same name. Ward of n strong 'nans love. Crane is her leading man nnd bends, Next Saturdays program at tbe highly competent supporting Clnyety theatre features Sylvia lireiim-ennd Robert Gordon in Reaper-tnbla J. Stuart Blnck-WhBy Proxy, Said to lie that is nt all familiar with ton Bathe production. motion pictures has not heard of a spiev, romantic comedy, the action Rosi-oWho has not on- - revolves around a young Southern Arbucklcf his joyed his good Matured comedy, his aristocrat who repents hasty likable personality, his familiar look marriage to a cheap actress. lie of astonishment, his slow but com- leaves homo and when lie returns woman another actress in pelling smile! young Now thp public is to see a new his mothers home posing as his Just ns good Matured, wife Arbuckle. Then began their career of just ns human, just ns likable bur respectability by proxy! la r 1 j which favor Nuccess is not H bestows upon lucky individuals. Nearly always, if we analyze it, we find that it is the result of font imioiiH study and hard work. In farming today, hard work alone is not likely to return satisfactory Modem fanning is a busiresults. ness, and requires bruins us. well as brawn. management is Capable estseut ini to good profits. flood management means careful planning, and this is the time of the year when lliat can best bo done. It is the true to institute a campaign of farm operations, which, if will increase your followed closely, profits for 1921 and future years. Here are a few suggestions: Take a complete inventory and If determine just where you stand. you have not done so already, open ii set of books, that is one of the first und important steps in putting the farm on a buisness basis. Collect all the available bulletins from which you can and literature burn new incihods that have proven successful. Study them and profit by the experience of others. Make out a comprehensive program for the yen r 'h work, mapping out the fields' with their crops and the work that will be required to handle future years in a from the Consider them. in the litter one, or to the kindergarten system of rotation, and plan the use university. original quantity; pork gained 'only brine will it where fertilizer of The question of affording these j one tenth in the 18 years, or hardly returns. films for this supplementary workint nil, yet it almost doubled in the Study your equipment, your should be dealt with in the same; five years. I)H hui I vour' buildings. or any other What was suhstant inllv tho worlds way as textbooks, termini in advance the locution of equipment, and not whether it is a meat trade of tho surplus export howand new necessnrv buildings env money success to the manufacturers, count rines in 1891 was 2,734,000,000 ho will so that they to build them No school introduces a textbook be- pounds, as determined by the bureau nefes-i;iblmost convenient and easily cause it is a good seller, and the of crop estimates; 1899 the by Building plans and detailed educational use of the film should quantity . had arisen to 3,137,000,000 considered costs and specifications he judged in the same by pounds; and by 1913, the year be well in ml vii nee of iietual building school authorities and citizens. fore the world war began, it was r much grent-ein operations will result I trust that the clubs will make 4.101.000.- 00) pounds. Tn 1913, the sulisfn ction ns well as economy. serious study of this newly applied lust year of the war, the worlds ex- careful consideration of the capac- aid to education and start their port meat trade was 0,400,000,000 road toward pounds, ity of your machinery and equipment the communities along comthe t do the work planned for in the nceurnte what i ii ; veil rs real progress Meat Imports Changed by War ing veer will give you an use of the educational film. practical knowledge well in advance of your Mrs. ,T, E. Church, in New West of the world's exDistribution needs. Include in vour consideration, live Magazine. ports of meat was naturally greatly the point changed by war. raising, poultry and the truck of view of imports, Consider your transportathe United eorilcn. tion needs vour hauling problem. Kingdom, which had for many years taken 02 pier cent or more of the Mar-succes- s emu-pun- r j f e e Beef Surplus Does Not VISION IN EDUCATION fntur,. of America depends on the present training of its coming That sounds trito, but it ci'izees. is more serious than many people The fact ere willing to admit. that 'urge numbers of schools arewithout teachers because of inaile-qiito wage, and still larger number' of children are receiving very little training, is a grave matter for our consideration. have ever felt the Women for the training of the children and at no time has there been greater need for added activity The tragedy than at the present. of th lest few years left thousands of little chihlien destitute nnd forced youths into the ranks- of unskilled labor. Many of our ideals lime been shaken and adjustments lave 'o be made to meet changing eo" litions. N.q that we should pritieise past Exist Says Expert The - ion me! hods, but enough that we to nntici-rshould have vision One of te he needs of todav. in our th grert.es! departments general federation activities is that Our women of npo'ied education. have been behind the various mod era movements inaugurated for ffiv-i-practical education to those dependent oil their own resources for a !i' ihoo-.lManual training was pushed by club women until it be- of the curriculum of n"ie a th-schools: vocational training ree ivod just attention until it is now v. it on its wav to general nnprnba-ti- . The right of every child to ii l.-.l music became a subject of ebs-ninq ia'ercst until no school is e, f .1 jVl) without a phonograph i f the best make. Now ns educational methods v e are coming to realize evolve, movies that in the there is a c renter value than that of good business cooreeremllv. For some time we have had so called educational fl'ms, which arc excellent in them selves, but ns a Ittmneinl venture There is no they are a failure. question but that we gain half our cduen'ion through the eye; the only question is the feasibility of using what has been looked upon as plea.-thhard, serious training work. group of our best a society for visual education, which is taking up the various problems of the practicability of the motion picture ill connection with academic nd vocational training. The problem be: q . - ' edueat-orgnnie- fore them is r.e ndnpatiou of the moving picture machine to purposes The educational film of instruction. is w leaching tool and must iio accepted as such; its entertaining feu It can never tii res pro' secondary. till' the place of a good teacher or textbook: its proper function :s to nupplo'nent and vitalize the written effective the films To I word. should be serial and arranged to fit curieulum, for it is evia sHV-ifident that motion pictures will not serve their proper use in our schools unless they are selected with direct reference to the subjects as taught I's'iial a the esw',their :i (lie w Popular misunderstanding is mag nifving the superficial fact that this country 1ms a beef surplus a surplus that 1ms had a precarious existence both before the world There and since. is something more to the story than the exports of several hundred million pounds of beef nnd its products in a year. To the extent that this is balanced by imports of beef, beef products, n ml beef cattle, it is not a surplus, recording to the bureau of crop estimates, Baited Stiitcs department of agriculture. Not only did the imported exceed the exported beef in 1 !1 4, but the equivalent beef and its products and edible of all of the cattle inqnirted from Gn mida nnd Mexico greatly exceeded the exports of beef cattle, so hat, within the scoe of the terms here used, the United States was n country with rcsjiect to deficiency beef in that year to the extent of ISO, 1100,000 Similarly in pounds. the national beef deficiency ,191.1, r was 92,000.000 Frances share of the worlds imports increased from 1.8 to 11.9 per cent from 1913 to 1918, ami Italys from 2.1 to 10.3 per cent. The three countries took 08 of the worlds percent, or total ment imports in 1913, ami 91 per cent in 1918, or almost the entire quantity. 1918. meat d two-third- New Sources of Supply. Brazil, Chinn, nnd BritMi South Africa rose to some prominence during the world war ns exporters of From a meat, Brazil especially. mimul export of 1,700,000 pounds of meat from Brazil in 1913 and 1914, the quantity jumped to 91,000,00(1 pounds in 191(1, to 230,000,000 pounds in 1917, and to 211, ooo, lino pounds in 1919, of which 4(i,ooo,ooo pounds was beef, 4(1,000,000 piounds pork, and 19,000,000 pounds unidentified 1 meat. , China was exporting yearly about to (11,000,000 10.000.- 000 piounds of beef and pork from 1912 to 1911. The quantity became 101,000,000 siuiids in 1917, and rose to 14S.0O0,-00From British pounds in 1919. South Africa, meat exports, mostly 09,000 beef, increased from about pounds at the time the war began to 18,000,000 pounds lif 191(1, and to 40,100,000 pounds by 1919. ' Tide. War demands turned the tide in when the national surplus of 191(5, beef was 11.1,000,000 pounds; in 1917 and in it was 200,000,000 pounds; was 191S the surplus 170.000,000 pounds. But the per cent in 1914 and received 7) per cent in 1911 and 1910, 07 pier cent in 1917, nnd 09 per cent in 0 jKiunds, War Turned worlds total, increased its share to 71.4 Beef vs. Pork. The war changed the United Kingfar offset the beef surplus doms imports of poik and its profell to 19,000,000 pounds, or less ducts from 29 per cent of all meat than 1 per cent of the production, imports in 1912 nnd 1913 to 34 per cent in 191(1, to 40 per cent in 1917, including edible offal. The United States has been a or- and to Id per cent in 191,8. weighThe fracsince 1913, ing l.tiltl, 1)00, 000 pounds. pins mutton country, only in I01S nnd 1919, by 1,000,000 tion for beef was about 47 per cent before the war, and it fell to 39 and 1,000,000 pounds, rixqicc! ively. In the last by 1918. On the other hand, the enormous per cent months of the war, the foreign hog exjairt of jmrk and its products luis been unfailing year after year for had become of mote importance to ii grent many years, with totals of th United Kingdom than the foreign hundreds of millions of pounds, even steer. France increased its imiorts of extending beyond two and beef relative to total imxrtx of billions of pounds in 1919. cent in 1913 to With regard to excess of either meat from 41 per 1911. 73 per cent in after which production or consumption of beef declined to less and mutton, this country may be year tho fraction said to be in a seesawing position, than (55 per cent in 1918, or to pounds. by such except as influenced foreign demand as that of a the ngii Principal branches of After all, tho constant great war. is one ment and of livestock industries cultural national surplus great of pork ami its products. Utah, Wyoming, Idaho, Montana and Meat was ex)mrted by the surplus Nevada "ill meet nt Ogden. Fob countries of the world in greatly of increased quantities in response to nm ry 17 and 18, for of the eomiio-yea- r Tho belter to the labor problems the war's demands, el in a conference nnniqid understand this, continues the bureau of crop estimates, it is well to com- a meeting of 'he execute eon, notice kipare the change in supply, for the of the Utah state farm bureau 1913 to 1918. with Monday night. five years from mi T.abor in its relation to the change for tho IS years from 1991 to 1913, or a period three and beef industry the canning the w, throe-fifthtimes as long. growing and livestock and fuutgr, The total exports of nil kinds of jug industries will lie discussed the pi of meat increased by one half in each representatives period; animal fats and oils gained state officials, 'iinnufiietuers, bv one fifth in the earlier period, but business men ami others. remained stationary in the war perThe meetings of February 17 Mill iod: mutton nearly doubled in the hr devoted largely to detailed eon declined about snlerat ions of labor problems in tin period, but credits in debits 1919 so that the one-hal- f 0 high-price- d -t s a tin- 1 4' tie- prim-iI'i binary ,n gs. f He wool firm bureau- - of will give iiian- - wheiebl" can take ad oolgiou wool vvareof the eation-inet . . o tideIn lit ii in v -- i'iviTi-i- ooooooooc Grafonolas Columbia v vantage mi-in- ' inii-ii'- t,f - l g RECORDS (OULU m A Big Project on Program. well-know- one-hal- in o i i!.-- u in cfiini-.iti-i-- j chan'(. bra pi'iile-d agr-i-ul- D. McKay, pi 1 1). of the state farm bureau, statml that the a both iabli'liing possibility of inning plant and a wool ware l i - lions- ! o e l,is sect ion u j! be Mr. Me llioiougli a' tent ion. la.v pointed out the immense saving freight Kites alone tfirough hav ii g such plants hire. It was est runted rougldv that if three saes sl.nuld join the movement, fieigbis amount mg to (,f $,,00,001) would be saved to the grow given - upwmd-Bnnuail- .v ers. 7 It The convention on the will of open vvith a general discussion the immediate problems in farm la bur. This will give wav to meet mgs of the Miiious branches of the industries where the represented specific problems will be considered end recom memlat ions pirepared. Tho sugar beet farmers will con siiler the labor in thinning and topThe canning commitping beet.-- . tees will discuss the labor used-- in REDUCTION PRICE The normal price of 85 cents is now effective on a large 1 picking the vegetables and fruits and in then boxing and ih livery to the vv w ill faetori. s. The oolg rowers discuss wages for shearers, herders and incidental labor. Road Men Invited. In the general conference which will follow the departmental meetings, the recommendations of the depart menst will be given thought and the convention will determine what twtiou it will take in the piremiscs. llcpresentntives of the per cent of Columbia Records W. L. REYNOLDS CO. Payson, Utah OOOOOOOOGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO' Utah state road commission, the industrial com mission and other boards have been invited to be present at the meetings. Imitations have likewise been ex to the sugar manufacturers, and other industries vitally concerned with the problems of ag rieulturnl labor. It is expected that from this meeting. tile largest of its kind ever held in Utah, will come recommendations nnd pugge-s- ions which will Juive much weight in determining he most important question of faim labor for tbe coming year. The farn bureau executive com inittoe will continue its sessions to day at the bureau offices. tend- ea imers SfiEBBBtiSBBLESSIBEBBBBHBBBBBBBBa STOCKS NEW Ginghams Silks t 1 MACHINE TO WORK WONDERS If Reports Are True, Present Methods of Harvesting Grain Will Soon Be Revolutionized. Wheat harvesting In the Central West, where planting Is on a large scale, in on tbe eve of being revolue tionized through the advent of a that repented experiments have shown will cut, harvest and thrash from 40 to 70 acres of standing grain In a day. It dumps cleaned grain Into wagons tftnt move along with tt. The revolutionary feature of It Is not alone that It can accomplish so much, but that It does it with hut one nmn on tile job. The difference in cost between this machines methods and the present scheme, winch Involves headers, binders, tin ashing mastraw chines, separators, wagons, cook cars, pitchforks, horses and men. Is calculated at $7 an acre, which Is as much as many thousands of acres of western Kansas and Nebraska land sold for a few years ago. Its inventors claim for It that It will jtmk half a billion dollars worth of harvesting machinery now in use, and release western gram growers from reliance upon the nomads who constitute the tinny of harvest bands that moves each summer from Texas to the Dakotas. Christian Science Monitor. Use for Old Clay Tablet. We don't know wlial tbe professional antiquarians think n bout It, but ns one more or less familiar with tbe trade, we are convinced thui the Baby- lonians practiced printing 4.DOO years Thosv clay tabTbe Babylonians we lets prove It. know to have been a wonderfully intelligent people and the archeologists tell us that they filed their legal documents, Inscribed on clay, with a thin Inver of damp clay laid over each in order to preserve It. And. of course, anybody with one eye and half sense, would have discovered that the east. or stereotype thus made could be. in turn, duplicated by hundreds. Clay copies of the clay documents each a matrix could be made m will by the original writer, ami there cun l e no doubt that it was don,, ton an ; rcMrniu an author from paid-si- mg, when lie has the menus at bund! only fancy what our own poets would do in the eimim stances! And perhaps they will adopt tills secret of the B.iliv hmians. We Babylonian may have spilled some beans, but we don't care. We know where there's a clay pit and we may go to publishing. Chicago Daily News. Domestic Dry Goods of all Kinds Now Arriving Your Purchase Can be Made With Absolute Confidence as to Right Prices. FARMERS MERCANTILE Ths Butters Complaint. 'There would be tevvtq divorces, said Gen. Baxter Sweerey at a Knoxville luncheon, if discipline were observed tn marriage if the rules of politeness held there us elsewhere. "A Knew ill, I utter the other day resigned Ins job. "U hi arc you i, Mining, Halliburh.m. ton?' a brother bull-"Because they that one so badly-,- ' was the answer. 'Why. they treat me as one ot the ftiurlv. Tlo- misMo-- s calls me an ol I tool as etien as she - dots her " CO-O- P UTAH PAYSON, BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBEflSBBBBBBSEKIBiSBEEIISEEIIBflBBEflilfll i, agile Gabriell hisself is lending A ear is what I says. ear. boy. Two darkies in a negro regiment Well, if yo is yearnin fn food were boasting about their com, my v wants a bonglcr wilh an hypnotic aide like we is got. Bov, when Ah buglers. hears old Custard Month .Tones dis-said oi.c; Glong wid von, bov, charge his blast, Ah looks at nuill Wt. is lie;, as and Ah says, Strawberries, you aint got no bunglers. lo is crowdin at boy Inhave yo selves. got the bonglcr, and when the vi hip eienni out. o mall dish. horn off that around his . lip wiaps Chv'Vion. Go!, it l sounds jes and blows like that irn Boston Symphony band No man has the courage tn tell a The Rosary. what her mirror does. vvouia pkiyin Yeli, I In'll you, replied the other. Talk up, boy; talk up. WomeM and jump at conclusions Yo is wadin deep into trouble. frequently hit; men reason things out An when he sounds at tapoo logically ami usually miss. Something Like a Bugler! the a v pay-pal- JHe Product gfijxpenence ago. i 5 3 FOUR NINETY ROADSTER This eifiii-anRi lister combines-everequipment convenience of larger open models with the appeal of limited seating capacity. Chassis design, construction and equipment are the same as in all Chevrolet models. Accurate balance and easy of control insure riding comfort for any distance or condition of travel. t Four-Ninet- ChnrcUt "Four-Xinety- " Roadster, y 775. f o.b. Flint, Mich. KNOWLES MOTOR CO. PAYSON, UTAH |