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Show TIIE PAYSONIAN, PAYSON, UTAH, FEBRUARY 11, 1921. 11 ' WILL Boy Scout Department BY THE BOY WHERE SCOUTING BEGINS i you over tried to answer the quest inn, "Where does scouting bePoes jt begin at the scout gin I Can a boy go to headquarters? scout meeting and be a scout while in meeting and as soon as he gets home forget about being a scout and be a true scout? What do you thinh? Is that kind of a scout a scout at all? The only way a boy cun be a true scout is by being a scout al ways wherever ho is or whatever he is doing. lie should always remember that when he makes the s out promise he pledges himself to be prepared at all times to gio service as a scout and to obey the scout laws. Name them off and see hue many you have liveu up to today. SCOUTS When any one hns trusted to do something for them have you lived Are you loyal to up to that trust? your nation, organization, and home? Have you helped anyone today? Have you been a friend to someone? Have you been courtious to those you have met? Have you been kind? When told to do a thing have you been obedient? When things seemed dark nave you been cheerful? While others have spent money fool Have .ishly have you been thrifty? you been bitjive enough to resist Have you been clean jte'nptation? Above .in thought, word and deed? These 'all, have you been reverent? are some of the questions a seout should ask himself euch night, j By this you may see that scouting does not begin at scout head quarters but with the boy himself, in his own home. i the execution of any public enient, especially of considerable magnitude, differences of opinion, ginning willi the very fundamental through continuing questions, and to completion of the improvement are bound to arise and continue. This is not only natural, but necWithout sueh differences, essary, leading to debate and consequent adjustment, the best interests of the community could not bo properly served. Exchange of ideas is very necessary. In connection with Utah County Drainage Distiiet No. 4, this paper tunc to time devote space will fro for tho purpose of discussions relating theieto for the benelit of the landowneis, and for the advanceThe iirst of ment of the project. such discussions follows: Differences of opinion relative to the drainage district are of two a mis1. Those duo to classes. 2. tho facts. of understanding Those of a purely personal nature, and involving hugely personal opinThe lust of these will be ion only- d. alt with first. The stato drainage district law, which is similar, especially for its miniate object, to the laws of all which! slates, both arid and humid, on based bo must sueh laws, have piimiples of justice, or it could not That this is the exist or operate. ease with the Utah law is evidenced deby the fact that it has been clared consitutional by the supreme court of the state, and that some have twenty-fivdrainage districts been organized, most of which have constructed under way or completed. Further that in counties where draindevelopments are under way, the age Ii7 si district to be organized has acted as a srmilus for other districts, which have been organized with increasing rapidity, for the leason that the first ones have proven successful and satisfactory. JYrhnps the most common error in understanding the drainage' district law is that the boundaries of the pioposed district, law as set I'oith in the petition for its creation, fill'd with the county commissioners And that a tract of land are final. so included is in for all time. Tils is positively net the case. It has been practically the universal experience with all drainage districts in this state, that the boundaries have not been made to include sufficient lands, especially along the This Jjjis been the upper boundaries. result of reluctance on the part of those organizing the district to include lauds which did not show and at the time of organ that they were in need of iing, drainage. . Fiuler the law it is more difficult In include lands not originally in i eluded, than to exclude lands origin-v included. f. has freqncntlv happened that before const met ion work on a district has started, lands beyond the upper seriously have become boundaries affected, with no means of drainage outlet except through the and with one or more owners to being incluucd, thus preto bo inventing others who desired cluded from being so included. l'or this reason, especially of recent years, having in mind the facts noted above, it has been tho policy to include all such lands around the upper margins of the proposed district, which reasonably seemed in need of drainage, or which in the drainlight of experience would need age in the near future. Manifestlv in organizing a drainauthorized age 'district, with no one extensive investigations, to make ami with no fnmls to woik with, it is nil impossibility to determine the exact facts, on which to base the it Therefore boundaries. district in.sometimes happens that lands are which do not and probably cluded never will require drainage. Hut, and this must be emphasized, there is ample safeguard in the law tn care for the exclusion of such investi-gati"lands, which upon thorough are shown to not need drain i age. and which consequently will ivc no benefit. The law provides that after the creation of the district, and the appointing of supervisors, a report shal be made by them to the county coniini'-ioier- s. Fpon the findings and recommendations of this report, base their the county decision ns to the final boundaries. obviousv this is the proper At the time of hearing the uuijty eonimisbujuers are poll! mu tin im-pr- b-- I 11 e v t. nd-ers- e re-e- pro-cedu- i not in a position to pass judgment except as to the project in general. No thorough investigation has been This is the duty of the dis made. triet supervisors, and is the first their step required by law, after npK)intment and qualifying. This is tho stage at which Utah 4 No. County Drainage District stands. Supervisors have been apCreer. pointed, namely, Jasper M. Uarl O. Nelson and Flint Dixon. us They liavu Engaged engineers, of Salt Margctts & Kleinsehmiilt Lake, and Stewart k Stewart of Provo. Surveys and investigations will be pushed as rapidly as weather conditions will pormit. James B. Tucker of Provo has been retained to do the legal work. The engineers and supervisors expect tA and will give consideration to all parties who cau assist by testimony or evidence in helping to determine the facts upon which the supervisors will base their report to the county commissioners. The motto of those in charge of the district is and will continue to be "A square deal to all ami favors to none. MADE HIS POSITION CLEAR His Supplication Unavailing, Central Figure In Tragedy Finally Takes a Determined Stand. The night was perfect benpnth the where the ear had promontory stopped ; the luke lay still under the glories of a full moon. But the occupants of the ear, a man and a woman, had no eyes for the beauties of the night. The latter was beautiful, perfectly attired. She was evidently a woman fit to grace the 400." Her hands bore witness to the fact that she had never known work of any sort. She and the pares of the world were strangers. The man was different He was an ordinary man In deep thought, his mind apparently tortured by some great problem. Suddenly he broke the silence. Why, O, why cau you not stay any he pleaded, "at least until longer. after the ball? 1 have told you once before, she replied, that I can never spend a moment under the same roof with a man who tried to do such au Infamous thing as you did. I know." he admitted, "but that was in a fit of passion. Couldnt yon forget that and come hack under the old conditions?" She pondered for a moment. His 1 heart ' beat wildly In expectation. am afraid not, because 1 tire of the I long for monotony of your home. the city. Its ga.v life and Its opportunities. No, I shall never, never come back to you. 1lease drive me to the depot. Not WATER-DIVININ- G French Government to Try Plan In fort to Locate Precious Fluid in the Sahara. Best Interests of Community Sought In Planning for Land Reclamation In TEST " Ef- - Professional Ethics The government of France has deg cided to test me value of iu Its African colonies, and an Impressively expert committee comprising geologists and surveyors, as well us diviners, bus been appointed to apply the uiugic rod to the Sahara. Since Moses first struck water from the roek the question of divining has been a moot one, and the world Is uo less water-dlvlu-in- the only tiling many people have against the great drug science of Chirop raetic is that Chiropractors adverti e The act of advertising is supposed to violate prints. the mandates of that vague something known as Professional lit hies. The idea seems to be that, Ihrougli advertising, the science .f Ihiropractie is reduced to the level of patent medicine and quackery. ABOUT credulous of its results In this age than In ancient duys. The dowser" bad a great vogue in Englund fn the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, especially In Cornwall, where numerous his prowess in learned works atte-finding metals under the earth. But even latterly dowsing" for water lias been attended with such success that science has had to explain the drooping of the forked huzel twig In the sueh theories us dowsers hands-bthat "certain people possess a supernormal perceptive faculty," and that the twisting of the branch indicated a mental disturbance In the dowser which Is beyond the scope of conscious perception." We can well Imagine that whether the twig or the man be the agent in the matter the French government will be well rewarded for their experiment in dowsing on a large scale If an extra oasis or two be added to the Sahara. Falling that, the world will doubtless come yet to the more complete and Imaginative plan, which has from time to time been mooted, of tipping the water of the Mediterranean Into the great desert by means of a canal. Manchester Guardian. n Ancient Commission, Marblehead (Mass.) Historical society came into possession of a valuable historical document lu the shape of a commission us lieutenant In the state militia of Nathaniel Hooper. The commission hears Che signature of Gov. John Hancock and his secretary, John Avery, and is dated 1791, In the lGth year of the Independence of the United States of America. The commission assigns Lt. Hooper to a company in the Second regiment, first brigade and second division of the militia of the commonwealth, comprising the county of Essex. , It Tt is true that patent medicines are adveitised. It is true that quarks But then, so do elm relies. advertise. And eveiy And So does ,T. U, Morgan. day it is becoming more difficult for nil unworthy pet son or firm or product nr service to secure advertising spare in the public prints. The line being drawn ever more sharply. Ethics pertains to the conduct and involves the moral question the qu'Si-- t F.thies are ion of right and wrong. when a man surelv violated as just conceals fiom n si. V world the fee? that he is prepared to rend r a heulth-tmildin- service. The great druglesg health science of Chiropractic is comparatively new. rafiv people do not know of il ; do not know that it has been demonstrated to he tlic most wonderful nnlhod of physical rejuvenation in the world today. unethical to conceal from ihe public the facts concerning thi That is why professionally etbiea' science. the public prints, of lie ethical tr r in Jioliee ethical Chiropractors give vice they are prepared to render the people of Ihe community. lt woidd he health-buildin- life-givin- ? ARTHUR N. EARLY Doctor of Chiropractic Over Wightinnns Supply Company Phone IT. Nf MR. FARME-RI Get Better Than The Market Price For Your Day. Quick to Retrieve. 0XXXXDKX0ODOX0XXD00X0 Jackson camp tripping merrily into bis tiny hall one day, and almost spoils his manly beauty by tripping over someones shoes left lying about. Whose ferryboats are those in the hall? lie asked later when hp entered the drawing room. mother-in-lahis Ferryboat s? cried angrily. Why, those are my shoes! Mv dear, good --no, Jaekson said said who hurriedly, ferryboats? You misunderstood. Fairy boots, von know fairy boots! And then he wiped the sweat from his brow Answers, London. I OOOOOOOOOOOOC Have your hay cut at the mill of the Utah Valley Milling & Produce Company X and ship it as feed instead of baled hay, and reap the benefit of the higher price 5 0 paid for hay in this form. Have it mixed with syrup and you have still a belter market, as there is an X ever increosing demand for this feed for dairy cows because of the greater X 0 amount of milk and butier fat which it produces. oxxoooooooxoooxxodxoxo ooooooooooooo UTAH VALLEY MILLING & PRODUCE CO. Payson, Utah Our Auto License Sureflour, made in our Santaquin mill, is the Best on fhe Market for Pastry and Bread. Order it from your Grocer. v. Notary Public H. PEYTON JOHNSON Teacher I Here Is Your Chance of Violin, Orchestra and We will give you the opportunity of trading in .165 South Main Street, Payson. Utah. Good Rules for Lifes Conduct. Those that are perfect men da not Payson Sheet Metal Works 's!ly give credit to everythin one ells them; for they know that human Roofing, Cornices, Guttering All Kinds of Sheet Metal 'railty is prone to evil, and very subject to fall lnwaids. It is great wisand Copper Work dom not to be rash in thy proceedings, First North St. Near Orem Depot not to stand stiffly in thine own as also not to believe everything Ahich thou hearest, nor jresently to relate again to others wlmt thou has! Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured teard or dost believe. by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There la only one way to cure Catarrhal Deafness, tae Dog. Entertaining and that Is by a constitutional remedy. HALLS CATARRH MEDICI.", acts the Elood on the Mucous t irfacea mustbe through kind Now, Willie, you Catarrhal Deafness Is of the System. to the nice little doggie (hat Uncle caused by an Inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. John gave you. When this tube Is Inflamed you have a I m going to rumbling sound or Imperfect bearing, and Course I will. It Is entirely closed, Deafnesj Is the take him over to Jimmie Smiths when result. Unless the Inflammation can be rehoove and let him fight their bull- duced and this tube restored to Its normal condition, hearing may be destroyed log. forever. Many cases of Deafness are caused by Catarrh, which is an inflamed I nets are hem but widows are condition of the Mucous Surfaces. ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for any made. case of Catarrhal Deafness that eannot HALL8 CATARRH be cured by lived to MEDICINE. Pleasures are the rom-iia- s Clreiilars free All Druggists F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. punctuate lifes story. S i 8 S Band Instruments Studio: j g - n be drew up under the overhanging branches of an elm. Once more he pleaded with her, $ 1 Roumania to the Front. ., these days wlieu Roumania emerges from the wreckage of the old continental order as the gieatest and potentially strongest state of southeastern Europe, the realization Is needful that a Latin people, imbued with Latin culture and the consciousness of a sorority of nations, exists on the barks of the Black sea and occupies as an outpost the west one of the most important strategic positions at the gates of the Orient. Through the union of Transyivunla and Bessarabia, Roumanian since time immemorial, with the old kingdom former by the fusion of Walla-ehiand Moldavia, Roumania comes to occupy an area almost as large as that of Italy, with a population more than twice that of Belgium. H. ROLAND TIETJEN is the privilege of an honest man rendering an honest service of value to give notice to the to his fellow-lie- u his of advertising, public, thiough to render sueh readiness and ability service. It is true that medical doctors do not, But doe, that as a rule, advertise. make them any more desirable cilizens than professors who head ediienlioiml And edfor example? institutions, ucational institutions advertise. In far from the station but she was adamant. This Is final? he asked In a last appeal. "Final. Well, then, get out and wnlk Rnd be hanged to you and all other cooks, he stormed. "Ill lower the wages of any one in my house if 1 want to, or know the reason why." Brown Jug. PAGE FIVE 8 your old cream separator for a NEW PRIMROSE 8 3 Call, write or phone us and we will be pleased to call i con--elt- on you and make the exchange This is for a limited time only, so do not delay in getting in on this offer. f Central Lumber & Hardware Co. S Payson, Utah 8 8 8 N a |