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Show "" LETTERSFROM Eat Potatoes and Save Wheat! OUR SAMH THE PAYSONIAN, PAY SON, UTAH j Dearest Mother: I hope this one of all letters will reaeh you by Motherss day, and it will show the appreeiation that one soldier boy has for his mother. It is a day set aside that we should honor you and that is what I do, for 1 not only honor you but love you as nnieh as I ean, and your thoughts are in my mind every day. Y'esterday you went down in the Valley of the Shadow for me you did it cheerfully and with a high courage for loves sake. As the days went by you took good care of me, and gave me rare and spent many weary hours over me, but with a loving care which only a mothei ean give; not a cross word did you utter if 1 was naughty and send ill By eating potatoes instead of wheat, the people of layson can help win the war as well as by Government purchasing Liberty Bonds andt w 1 g -- 1 TinE TABLE 1 Orem Electric 1 to 1J j j I! la-i- 1 Is there Anything You Need to Work the Farm or Garden? We Have It HOW ABOUT THAT HARROW? We have some good ones, and you'll satisfied with the Prices. be perfectly You know we sell Lumber, too! ! Trenches. Local Flour MillWill Buy the Wheat, Grind it Into Flour and 8hlp it. Farmers Duty la to Get the i Wheat to the Mills. 1 heat for the Allies. Americans should rally to the support of the potato, for, like corn, it is a native of this continent and is as thoroughly AmeriIndian. can as the American trying in many ways, and as th When it is realized that the podays went by into weeks, weeks tato is one of he chief foods into months, and monlhs into (lermany and that years I became a young boy, and the other European countries are your cares were lessened but largely dependent upon it, its imyour worries increased, womler-n- portance in the war may readily if I would measure up what b seen. Yet the potato was not you expected of me. Y'our kind known abroad until the end of wajs and loving care pulled 11m the sixteenth century when both through that period where a boy the English and Spanish introsows his wild oats. And Mother, duced it from their American I want to make you feel that I colonies. appreciate you and worship this Try This Recipe for Bread. day of days Mothers day. May One quart mashed potatoes, the boys, my brothers and sisters small can tuna fish, 2 eggs well give their appreciation and ma you feel glad that you arc a heatcu, salt, pepper. Mix numbed mother of such boys and girls, potatoes and tisli well, add sea Dearest Mother, may this day b soiling, put in baking dish, pour happy one, for we are the ones melted butter oxer ibis and bakt that ought to be glad and bend 30 minutes. down and pray to our Heavenly Potato Rice Bread. Father that you was ehosen to ( uo A pound pound lioui be our mother, and thank Him mashed potato, 2 cups cooked for sending you to Father; you I1, cups liquid including sacrificed everything and for love rice, veast. 2 teaspoons salt, 2 teamarried Father and. dearest spoons sugar, tablespoons Mother, if we have such a wond- mflted fat. Hake V hours. erful girl as you made Father, The Conservation Committee then we will he not only happy will demonstrate ' two new use but always rich, not earthly of potatoes Friday afternoon riches but the eternal kind which IH, from 3 to 5, at Colvin & May will last for ever. Reeces hardware store. I am away from you many miles hut not' in thoughts, for chain one continuous they are thoughts that there is no hut such thing as distance or miles, which readies over space and time and makes one continuous row. As you spend the day in church, so will I spend Effective May 19, 1918. the day, and as you pray, so will 1 give up Blanks for having such molher as you. I look hack over the times when I loved to put my head mi your lap and have you stroke my hair and pet pet me; those times have changed hut I still have that longing have never gave way to though them. Mother, he happy on this day your day ami will he happy PAYSON also, because I know you are hap pv. Yeslerday you went down inSALT LAKE CITY to the Valiev of the Shadows for me, you did it cheerfully and with LEAVING PAYSON a high courage for loves sake; 3:15 PM 6:15 AM 'with me you emerged triumphant l! 5:15 PM 8:00 AM in your arms. Today 1 have the 8:15 PM 9:15 AM privilege to go into the same val11:15 PM 11:15 AM ley a new world which is 1:15 PM born; that which is conceived A Mileage Book will save you will he called holy unto Hie Lord am carrying on cheerfully. money. Mother, with your high courage Investigate Ask the agent. The lnterurban can give better the triumph is certain. Hod bless service on your freight shipment you. Your loving son, whether it be a hundred pounds or a carload. JFX1DR WADSWORTH. Through rates and routes to inWe endorse, word for word, terstate points in connection with the Union Pacific system and everythin" patriotic men of Pav-so- n think of the kaiser, eve allied lines. Low excursion rates to Salt though it would not ho polite to Lake City every Sunday. Fare print their opinions in their own for round trip $2.10. language. I Needs the Flour For Our Soldiers in the j contributing to the lied (Voss. The situation in brief is this.) We have not enough wheat for our Allies and ourselves. We have an abundance of potatoes, an excess of DO, 000.000 bushels over normal times. If we are to win ibis war ho Allies must have wheat. The potato cannot quite come up to wheat in food value but it dot's come about as close to taking the place of wheat as any other food. Therefore, by eating potatoes we ean save nr COLVIN- . .;. .5, . . No United people In tlie history States have such an of the oppor- tunity to serve their government as tlia Utah farmers have right now. Al- most half of the people In the world are hungry, women as lovable and good as our own mothers are atari lag. children aa sweet as ours are dropping by the wayside from famine, the soldiers In tl.e trenches uiay have to give up the fight because they huxent enough food to keep up their strength. Farmers read this announcement fVigm the Federal Food Administrator, TV. W. Armstrong, and seo what ho has to say about your wheat and Hour:' Every patriotic ei Matsu in Vtuh is asked to turn In his surplus flour,-anto send iiis wheat to the nearest mills to be ground, thus releasing mill feeds for the livestock. The cost of Imported mill feeds, oil cake etc.. Is so high in mun.v portions of the stale that farmers have been compelled to feed their wheat or to sacrifice their stock both Instances of criminal waste under the preseut war time necessity. It Is absolutely a question of patriotism nosy, for the government needs the flour and the soldiers aeed the food. The Mertnon Relief Society has done a .splendid thing In releasing over 200,000 bushels of wheat, but every sack of flour Is bought single up with rejoicing and every bushel of wheat sent to the mills la recorded With joy. 1. Flour must he in original mill packages, either 24, 48, or 118 pound sacks. 2. Flour must be one hundred per cent flour or better, commonly kuowu as straight grade or high patent. 3. The local flour mills will buy the wheat, grind it into flour and ship out the flour. The fanner's duty Is to get his wheat to the mill. 4. The price to he paid for flour Is $4.7.1 i icr hundred pounds, net weight. This will allow the mill to pay the farmer the fair market price for Ills wheat. Fanners should turn in their grain and take the cash. The president has fixed the price for t lie 1918 crop and the crop reports indicate a much heavier yield of wU-a- t and other grains in 1918 than in 1917. There is no reason to expect that grain will command a better price, and every fanner knows that the longer he holds Ids wheal the greater his risk of loss frotii shrinkage, vermin, dampness and fire. Take flour to the nearest mill or GET WISE d GET THE CODLING MOTH BEFORE IT GETS THE APPLE A circular which should be of much interest to apple growers has just been issued by the Itali Agricultural Experiment Station. In past years Ihe Experiment Station lias done considerable work on llie codling moth from which Professor Hagan, the author of this circular, has summarized the essential information for controlling the pest. A spray of arsenate of lead about three pounds of paste or one and f pounds of powder to 50 gallons of water is recommended as the most effective method of control. Two sprayings will usually be sufficient. The first should lie applied three to five clays after the petals begin to fall, and the second about ton days later. A free copy of this circular, giving more detailed information may he obtained from the Utah Experiment Station, Logan, Utah. one-hal- Why not get wise in time? Why wait till it is too late? People all over the couutry, north, south, east and west, are getting wise to the ruinous results of buying. n Thinking people are now refusing to patronize houses. Are we going to wait until we are knocked down and run over before we get wise? Lef us spend our time and money in building up something that is ours. Patronage of home business means the building up of a strong industrial community of our own. Neglect of home business interests means the building up of a machine that will one day crush us without mercy. Let us build for ourselves and for our frier.ds and neighbors. Let us get wise before it is too late. out-of-tow- n out-of-tow- The Doctor Away From Home PROBATE AND GUARDA1NSHIP When Most Needed. NOTICES. Shots from Salem People are often very much Mr. Anthony Peterson who wao so seriously" hurt in the automo- disappointed to find that their bile accident is on the improve family physician is away from and there are high hopes for his home when they" most need his recovery". services. Diseases like pain in the Miss Precilla Christensen was a stomach and bowels, colic and Salt Lake visitor and her sister, diarrhoea require prompt treatMrs. Claudia Sutherland of Provo ment, and have in many instanlook her place in theorem depot. ces proven fatal before medicine could be or a physician Miss Louise Holder left Thurs- summoned.procured The right way is to day for Myton where she will jkeep at hand a bottle of Chammake an indefinite stay with her berlain's Colic and Diarrhoea brolhers and tlicir wives. Remedy. No physician can prescribe a bettor medicine for these Several Salem people attended diseases. By having it in the Stake Conference in Payson Sathouse you escape much pain and urday and Sunday. suffering and all risk. Buy it Mrs. Laura Harper and chil- now; it may save life. At all dren have come here for the sum- druggists. ndv mer. They will live with Mrs. Another very beautiful little Harpers father, Mr. Louis Tav-losong now going the rounds rims like this: Mrs. Myrtle Lyshcm spentWed-nesdaHush little Thrift Stamp, and Thursday morning here willi her mother, Mrs. Ym. don,t you cry, Youll be a War Stamp, bye H. Taylor. Her mother returned to Spanish Fork wilh her Thurs- and bye. day afternoon to do their decorating of graves in the Spanish Fork cemetery. r. Consult the County Clerk or the respective signers for further information. Iu the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District, in and for Utah County, State of Utah. NOTICE TO CRED1T0B8. In the matter of the estate of Chris- tian Peterson, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at his place of residence in Santaquin, Utah County, Utah, on or before July 27, 1918. PETER A, PETEHSON, Administrator. M, R. STRAW, Provo, Utah, Atty. for Administrator. Date of first publication May, 23, 1918; last Juno 27. It isnt the Payson woman with six children and a house to look after that does the most talking about her rights. y A woman can be said to have reached the age of discretion when she remembers to forget her birthday. Come in and See Mr. and Mrs. Angus 1). Taylor; were the guests of Mrs. Taylors father and brothers, on their West mountain farm near layson Sunday forenoon. They attended Stake Conference in the the Famous afternoon. Mr. S. F. Curtis attended school board meeting at Spanish Fork Tuesday evening. Mrs. Pearl II. Halverson bus Lame Back Relieved. home from teaching returned For a lame, hack apply" Chamis undecided yet as to She school. V berlain Liniment twice a day and massage the muscles of the whether she will go to California back over the seat of pain thor- with her husband when lie returns from tin East where he has oughly at each application. been attending school, or whether 1 she will remain here with her Chroma Constipation. parents. Perhaps you have never tliougl Mrs. Eliza Taylor and sort Alof it, hut this disorder is duo to lack of moisture in the residn bert had iis their guest for sup-- 1 matter of the food. Tf you wi per Sunday evening Miss Jane! Dimniick of Spanish Fork. drink an abundance of wate eat raw fruits and take lots Mr. A. J. Poulson was here on! outdoor exercise, you mav 1 business He called on1 Monday. able eventually" to overcome several of the farmers while in' entirely'. In the meantime m low n. the most miM and gentle lax Hives. Strung and harsh ratlin tics take too much water out ihe system and make a bad ma ter worse. Chamberlain's Table are easy and pleasant to Ink Hive them a trial. Even when a husband isnt henpecked he may be a sorehead. IN TIME j We Have Secured the Agency for this Wonderful Machine for Utah and Juab Counties, and Have a Car on Exhibition for Your Inspection. Expert Battery Qhar&in& Kinds of Repair Work, Guaranteed TUI We Sell Good Year and Firestone Tires and Accessories KNOWLES MOTOR CO. |