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Show Tttfe PAYSONIAN, PaYSO, OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO , ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo The privilege of asking questions to be answered by Miss Dean is open to every reader of the Paysonian. Questions will be answered as quickly as they can be forwarded to Miss Doan in New York and will appear upon receipt here in the next issue of the Paysonian. All questions must be addressed to Miss Priscilla Dean, care of the Paysonian, Payson, Utah. fcihl the thirteenth day of the month. This is the thirteenth Particle of the thirteenth week oi this scries of beauty talks-an- d it will appear in print on Priday. So prepare for the worst. It is inevitable. There is no escape. Calamity always folSoonlows the wail of the banshee. er or later the blow will fall. Sooner or later you will be a victim of tho dread visitation. 1 have tried to break the news gently. I have given tho warning. On your own head be it that first gray hair. Nobody wants it. Everyone dreads it. Its descent is swift and sudden. It alights on the pinnacle of beauty and counds the death knell of youth. Beauty shrinks neath the weight before the of misery and sways spectre of age. Oh, glory of our race that so suddenly decaysl (William Cullen Bryan wrote that.) Nevertheless, the grim, gray sits tight on beautys brow and at the spectre stalks gloomily beautys side ' until, in despair, she grasps a pen and writes a lament. Alack-a-day- ! The lament is addressed to me. Dear Miss Dean: I am discon solate. What shall 1 do to prevent gray hair? Again and again and again the pitiful question is brought to me on And answer a tray at breakfast. must be ever the same, though usually courteously camouflaged: Dear Beauty: Dont weep, nor faint, nor dye, nor try any foolish experiments. Just grin and bear it. 1 suppose you will think me cold, You unfelling and unsympathetic. may even say: Oh, just wait until she begins to got gray, then she will understand. That may be true, but at present I am giving you the benent oi what has been told mo by the best beauty experts in the country. They agree that nothing can really prevent hair from getting gray. it would be as easy to stem Niagara, to turn back the hands of time or to find the founIf any prevention tain of youth. were known or antidote possible it would bo long ago have been in such general use that no such thing as a person would bo seen outside a museum. But gray hair can be made an asset. It does not, necessarily, betoken the near approach of senility. On the contrary, if properly cared for and becomingly arranged, it conveys a pleasing impression of pots, dignity, reliability and experience. This, to any business woman, should be invaluable. In social life and in the home gray Lair can be made to and look wonderfuJy charming attractive. I have often hoard it said that life is what wo make it. In my opinion the hair, also, is what we make it. Y'ou do not like gray hair and so you neglect it or abuse it with concoctions which usually do harm and, at the be.st, can do no permanent good. Or you say you are getting old and it doesnt matter how you look. It does matter. It is not an extravonce agance to go to a a week and have your hair waved. The resultant effect will, with care, last througout the intervening days ban-sho- , gray-haire- d hair-dress- e Stolen Fruit In how numy things is each day like its predecessor? And in how many things are this years days like the days of ten years ago or longer? Just think of this in your own routine and habits. Then, if you wish to have an Interesting experience, see In how many ways you could change this monotony and sameness without disadvantage and with positive advantage in and then make the many cases change. True, It will come almost as a shock, the realization thnt many confirmed habits, customs, viewpoints have been and are time wasted, strength wasted, money wasted, useless and needless drains and strains. And if you are sincere and determined in the conversion of your mode of life In the daily little things, you will be astonished to find that some of your most cherished customs are the most reasonless. The discipline of changing will he good ; the resulting saving of time will be better. Exchange. Joy of Easter, In the gray of the early morning, while yet the city slept. And only the old his watch in the church-towkept. On a suddan the chimes of Eester fell like a silver rain. And the rills of mellow music laved weary heart and brain. "Awake, for tho Lord is risen I they sang."The night is oer. From the graves of sin or sorrow arise, rejoice, adore! bell-ring- er er improve your appearance that will feel yourself well repaid. Then you must study a really becoming style of dressing your hair Gray hair should never be brushed and drawn back smooth, down Such a style is jo straight lines. severe and trying for even tre most perfect features. It gives to the face Neither does an aged, harsh look. gray hair Look well, especially upon an elderly person, when it is so loosely arranged as to give an untidy, sort of There is a happy rakish, an appearance. medium. Study the pleasing modes of Exseen in shop windows. Then buy a periment a little. The nets are especially easy to adOf course just and cost but little. even they require a little pratice to put on without disarranging the' hair, but any hairdresser will give you a practical demonstration of the best method of handling them as well as nets triangular-shapethe larger, which many people prefer. The secret of wearing a net is not to draw it down too tight. Nets are not intended to be drawn tight. On the contrary, they should rest very be loose over the hair and snould here and caught lightly, not tightly, tere with invisible hair-pinMany hair dressers give the ends of each pin a decided bend to prevent them from slipping out of the loose meshes of the net. By this means the pins form a sort of hook and do not have to be forced so far into the coils of hair as to make it look stiff and artificiaL The natural, fluffy, curled and waved appearance can be preserved without the suggestion of being disheveled and Everyone dreads gray hair, yet I have never met but one person who refused to admit that gray hair was beautiful and always becoming on other people. It is a poor rule that does not work both ways. If it is becoming to other people it is becoming, or will be becoming to you if you make it so. It will not be becoming if you do not wear it with good grace. So do not fret and worry and cultivate wrinkles and a bad tem-peg i- - d s. wind-blow- r. Beauty must smile and try and forget that any change is aceuring in the color of the crown she wears. That is the surest and best method I know for retarding the transformation process. Of course there are other means at her disposal. Anything that will promote hex own good health and stimulate her sclap is sure to have its effect. But beauty doctors agTee that it is just as natural for some people to get gray hair young as it is for some to have light hair and others dark hair. But everyone admires the beauty any young woman who appears at a fancy-dres- s party in the style of the early 70s, with her hair powdered and elaborately arranged. And any young face framed in gray rair, if the hair is arranged in equally becoming manner, can be just as fascinating. I know one young woman of whos eartistie taste in twenty-threthe selction of her hate and gowns make her always look as if she nad just stepped forth from the frame of some rare picture. She is youth personified but she is quaint, individual, distinctive, beautiful and her hair is perfectly gray. Go, thou, and dress likewise. Heed the Banshees warning. Don't dye. Be brave. Be original. Be gray 'but be beautiful. (Copyright by Tne Biee Feature Syndicate, 1919.) e, After all, Abraham Lincoln was great because he had horse sense and courage enough to apply it. Once Teach econ upon a time he said: That is one of the first and omy. highest virtues. It begins with saving money. By Alfred Wens. I was walking over e field today and saw a sprig of green. An. alfalfa crown has budded and is pushing into leaf, though tho snow has not all loft ua and winter tarries reluctant on its way. A green leaf from out the cold earth, yet it causes no surprise. So accustomed have I become to the yearly miracle of spring that I should bo struck with wonder if no leaf appeared. But the resurrection of life from tho tomb of winter is unsearchably and fraught with moaning, for life has mysteries we may not fathom, and the expanding leaf echoes tho word of the angel to tho wondering women at the He is not tomb of tho Lord. hers; He is risen. The leaf I saw lifts itself untroubled toward the sun, and the naxt year and tha next, whether war still rages or has ceased, other leaves will do tho same and grow in softening benediction oven over shell-torsoil and graves newly made of bravo man destroyed in sacrifice for principles of right. Each spring is the Easter of tho year, bursting open tho tomb of winter. Life is eternal. Mans warfare is an obstruction but for the moment to tho orderly processes of life, and tho Easter season will continue at ovary appointed tirao, the unfolding loaves speaking tho message of immortality. grief-stricka- Z Engine ignition positive powerful perfect from Bosch high tension oscillating magneto, built into every insures hot spark that gives utmost power from fuel. Oscillating type means quick start with little cranking, i Highest grade magneto on the market every part interas accurately made as a fine watch. Its action changeable is positive, its spark is fiery intense hot! All contact parts extra strong case hardened wear resistfor the ing. This guarantees lifetime ignition-servic- e Perfect ignition gives the Z added power quick starting smooth, steady operation under all loads. Come in today and let us tell you about other exclusive "Z features. For instance: Runs on kerosene, coal oil, tops, as well as gasoline; more than rated power; every part interendurance. efficient design; long-live- d changeable; clean-cu- t, Z. Factory Prices: lH.P 3 H. P 6 H. P f7S.OO 125.00 200.00 FREIGHT EXTRA gold by COLVIN & REECE CO. Dry-Tim- half-bottl- e PROFESSIONAL CARDS ice-wat- er ed liquid soap. Hops. Frank Vanderlip, former president of The National City bank of New rork, dedicated a book thus: This book is dedicated to my six children, with the hope that they, and their generation, will grow up possessed of an abundant sympathy with their fellows, and a sufficient knowledge of economic law, to enable them to make a liberal and wise contribution of srvice to society. Salt Lake & Utah are grown in a number of states. In the central and northern part of the state of New York many farmers make a specialty, of their growth. The yield is from 700 to 800 pounds the acre In that state, but on the Pacific coast, where most of the (Orem Line) hops consumed here are grown, the PREFERRED STOCK yield Is between 1.000 and 2,000 FIRST Oregon produces pounds per acre. Dividends 'payable quarmore hops than any other state in the Union. By far the greater part of the terly yields better than 7 hops raised have been consumed In per cent, annually on presthe breweries of the country, buv they ent price. An opportunity are also used In pharmaceutical prepsafe investment in a local for of 1 arations. The present one-hacompany. per cent beer contains hops, but not In such large quantities as In beers Descriptive circular on apof the larger alcoholic content And plication. Address then It Is not likely that the kind of R . beer permitted under the prohibitory law will appeal largely to the drinkers Assistant Secretary, e of beer. It seems certain off will fall that the demand for hops BALT LAKE & UTAH R. R. CO. Hops Railroad Co. lf '.JOE BROWN, old-tim- Salt Lake Citv - - Utah. - lUBunnuiiinuiiiHiiiiiiiiniiuiiiiiiiiiiiuii M B WE CARRY G. F. TILSON. M D. PHYSICIAN and SUZUIumm Office ft'. u A Complete Line of at Residence Street Phone Payson, Utah i in a a Globe I A- -l Mixed Feeds I and nM n Armless Painters Win Fame. Some years ago In London I saw fine water-colo- r landscapes by an artist who had lost both arms, writes a reader to the Manchester (Eng.) Guardian. His name, if I remember rightly, was Bertram Hiles, and he held his brush (a rather long one) between his teeth when painting. And at the Edinburgh School of Art some twelve years ago or more there was a student who also was armless, though he held his crayon or pencil with his toes. Then there was the case of Daniel At one time Ylerge, the Spaniard. Vlerge was a facile but not greatly distinguished magazine Illustrator, and his reputation was confined to his own country. But becoming paralyzed In hls right side and losing the entire use of hls right arm he learned to use fils left, developed a new style influenced by the slower execution, and gained an International reputation as a pen and ink draughtsman. Script or Print Writing? There Is a movement in England to abolish script writing nnd replace It by print writing. The characters used In the proposed system are the ordinary printed letters known as the Roman block letters with the exception of a and g, which are simplified Into their script forms. Print character were used centuries ago by monks before script writing became the fashion. Advocates of the proposed reform claim that it has many advantages over ordinary handwriting, particularly in that the child learns much more quickly. Many British educational authorities favor print writing and It Is taught In numerous British schools. There Is no war' of time on Insures Hot Spark e Atrocity. tale of woe, with Sir Arthur Shirley Benn, head of the British trade mission, was told at a dinner at New York. Sir Arthur, when he arrived in the United States, brought his own sup ply with him in a golf bag. Recently the supply was exhausted all save a of real stuff. Calling In some of his fellow delegates, Sir Arthur proposed a final drink. Glasses were filled, the bottle, was emptied and a toast was proposed. Sir Arthur likes A A Dedication. water in his. And' at some of the American hotels where he had stopped they have cute little taps stuck into the wall or Into the washbowl from which ice water flows when the button is pressed. This was the last drink and Sir Arthur wanted to be careful. So he pressed the button carefully. Then he tried to down his drink. He didnt; he had made a mistake. Instead of the tap be had used a tap that yield- n, the Innumerable joining DR. L. N. ELLSWORTH 5 DENTIST It will pay you to call in Dougls la Building Over Bertelseas Store Office vestigate them and give the animal a chance to keep you instead of you keeping the animal. 41! J. H. ELLSWORTH DR. DENTIST over Bank, Payson, Ut. Office Hours, 9 to 12; 1 to 6 Phone 26. Res. Phone 103-- J J.ce All we ask of you is to judge them on business principles. DR. A. T. GOIJGH Registered Veterinarian Phone PAYSON, in- 116-- 1 - - - UTAH 4fc BAKER & Payson Harness Shop, BAKER, Attorneys and Counselors at Law. Collections and Adjustments Everywhere. West Center Street, Provo, Elks Building, Eureka, Utah, Payson, Utah. 108 niiiiunmniiisiiEiflflEfliiflfliiMiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiflN Why man we made this cigarette for you! of letters,, and superfluous loops and flourishes are abolished. At least one big London firm has adopted the Built In Bosch Magneto UTAH, FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1920 fit your cigarette completely youll agree were to meet your taste made they Unique flavor, fragrance and due to Camels qualand blend of choice Turkity expert ish and choice Domestic tobaccos are a revelation You will prefer the Camel blend to either kind of tobacco GAMELS New Ideas In Adding Machine. At least two novel features are em bodied In the construction of a new adding machine described In the PopuMost re lar Mechanics Magazine. markable, perhaps, is the facility and safety with which It may be taken apart, In spite of Its complex nature, a pair of pliers and a penknife being the only tools necessary. The opera tlon of greatest value, however, Is the machines ability to subtract ns easily as It adds. This Is made possible by a simple reversing lever which causes tbs adding wheekWroabsckward. To Make roiato Arrangements have been made In Great Britain for the establishment of mills for the production of potato flour, which It is hoped will be on a large scale. Although this industry has been established on the continent for several years it Is a new one in Great Britain. The British ministry of foods has for some time been conduct Ing experiments in potato flour, as there has been an overprodartinn of snipes, and the flour will provide a for tbs Consumption of the over t 1 mel-low-mild-b- ody ! smoked straight! With Camels you can go the limit without tiring your taste. They leave no unpleasant cigaretty aftertaste; no unpleasant cigaretty odor! To get a line on why Camels win you so completely compare them ff with any cigarette in puff-for-pu- |