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Show THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH How Mount Blanc Looks to Up-to-Da- Never in History Has So Much Wealth Fallen Into Lap of Education Tourists te By PRESIDENT A. L. LOWELL, Harvard University. effects of the great war surprised ns. One of the results us deeply here. The people who have suffered since the war the continent of Europe more acutely than any other class have been the professors, because they were paid in a constantly falling currency. Their means of publishing bocks and of getting apparatus has been greatly diminished. ,What effect is that likely to have? Is it not almost certain to retard their growth? Is it not sure to hamper their work? On the other hand, there has never been a time in the history of this country, and I think the history of mankind, when wealth has fallen into the lap of learning as it has since the end of the war. I cannot help feeling that that has a " moral for us. In the same time It takes a dose oi We have been more distinguished in the past in building railroads oil a to LHng a little temporary relief than we have in producing great books, books that turned the current of of gas and sour stomach, Phillips human thought in new directions. We have been more successful in oui Milk of Magnesia has acidity completeindustries than we have been, on the whole, in our learning. I notice at ly cheeked, and the digestive organs all Once you hare tried the present time that the public at large thinks the object of institutions tills tranqulllzed. form of. relief you will cease to of higher learning is to win football games. worry about your diet and experience a new freedom in eating. is view are our But and Perhaps they right. quite different, yours rThls pleasant preparation Is Just as mine. We feel as if we owe something to men. We feel as if we had regood for children, too. Use it whenceived the sacred fire and that that sacred fire must be kept alive. Perever coated tongue or fetid breath need" of a sweetener. Ihysl-haps you agree with me that if we let that fire go out we deserve to be signals clans will tell you that every spoonburied alive like the vestal virgin. . We have built the land of our coun- ful of Phillips Milk of Magnesia neu-- . We have made we desert established the have trallzes factories many times its volume in acid. try. fertile; great Get the genuine, the name Phillips is and we ought to do it. Imitations do not act tbs Now is the time when we will begin to sow the seed of the greatest Important same intellectual movement that the world has ever known. If not we do not deserve to be where we are. We ought to feel that the time has come when if our country is going to be great we must begin now. Now we must feel the spirit of that inner voice intellectually. We have a right to feel everything is before us. It is for us now to make the contributions which our fathers have made it possible that we should make. So far as intellectual pursuits are concerned we are living in the carnivorous age. TIIE A &our Stomach llie This striking picture of Mt. B'.nnc was made from a plane piloted by Lieutenant Thoret, the intrepid airman it d Air union, who recently broke all European records by flying eleven passengers over the Alpine peak. snow-cappe- 1 Dancers in Columbias Play, Oh, Hector Phillips Milk of Magnesia For Piles, Corns Dishonesty in Business Is Now Scarce Enough to Be Sensational News . Bunions,Chilblains, etc. Hanfords Balsam or Myrrh UUwMaMdtiNWmiMsktSi ' By OWEN D. YOUNG, General Electric Company Official. These dancing girls" are undergraduates of Columbia university in their play, WINS LAMME MEDAL Our big business is no longer feared by the people. Exploiters no longer own them. Their shares are spread from one end of the country to the other. Broadly speaking, the vast organizations are in skilled hands and the roads are reasonably safe. The American public 25 years ago was more or less in the position of an old friend of mine whose horse became frightened when it saw its first automobile and jumped a fence, wrecking the buggy in which the old man was riding. The driver of the car stopped and asked the old gentleman if he could do anything for him. I think youve done enough foT No, the old fellow answered. Oh, Hector." Acrobatic Stunt of Colliding Cars st:hu cim otaaib :uh, or banitis sA aasUy and cjoickly removed. with oat knife or firing iron, Abeorbine reduces them parmanantly and leavaa no blemishes. Will notbUatar or ratnova the hair. Horse worked doting treatment At druggist! or 2.50 postpaid. Horse book S free. Surprised user writes: Hoiw ft ad tuvat sbos bofl I 1 5-- ever saw. Now ell gone. would not have thought (bat AbsorbtiN could taks it away so oompletsly. s wTr Inc. MO Lymngt..5prieria7fcM. today. The American people had the same fear of big business as the old mans horse did of the auto when it first appeared around the bend, d snorting and clattering, 25 years ago, but with the present machines, run by careful, expert drivers, that fear has largely disaphigh-geare- peared. The danger today comes not from bad men in business or bad principles, but from the difficulty of applying right principles to complicated situations. Our greatest risk is in the mistaken judgment of good drivers where the traffic is heavy and the signals are complicated. By and large, looking over the quarter century with which I have been familiar, I am pleased with the rapid progress which we are making toward the right in business. We are not perfect, and never shall be, but we are training our young men with a sense of their great responsibilities and we are providing them with experience from our own mistakes. As time goes on, I feel that the right in business will more and more prevail. The larger business becomes the more scrupulously careful the administration of it will be. Eloquent Do you believe money talks? Yes, mine Is always saying, , Some people are never satisfied until they find out something that mokes them dissatisfied. What Will , Aimlessness Is Greatest Danger That Now Threatens Democracy : These two cars near Bishopvllle, S. C., wound up In a position that would do Justice to a couple of acrobats. The driver of the one on the bottom tried to avoid the one on the top. A second before the former tried to get out of the way, the latter turned over and on the secoud turn landed on top of the other. Strangely enough, no one was injured. . Allan Bertram Field, electrical engineer of Manchester, England, who has been awarded the first Lamme Gold medal by the American Institute of Society Women Clean Their City By REV. CHARLES FRANCIS POTTER, New York. Democracys greatest danger, whether in politics or religion, is aimlessness. ' In an absolute monarchy the citizens have their purpose selected for them. The people of Italy know what they are aiming for because Mussoiini tells them. They are making great progress because1 they are unified in purpose. The same thing is true of Boman Catholic- When your Children Cry for It There Is hardly s household that hasn't heard of Castorlal At least five efforts to waste their and are Democratic countries likely religions million homes are never without it. If and diminish their power by changing from one ideal to another as there are children in your family, Protestantism has passed through there's almost dally need of Its comdifferent factions gain control. fort And any night may find you very a period of democratic experiment, but the era of divisions has ended thankful there's a bottle In the house. and a strong unifying movement is evident. The Federal Council of Just a few drops, and that colic or Churches has afforded an excellent means for correlating the divided is- constipation Is relieved; or diarrhea a sues of Protestantism and giving scattered factions a new purpose. Prot- checked. A vegetable product ; baby remedy meant for young folks Castorla estantism will triple its strength when it unifies around some great la about the only thing you have ever heard doctors advise giving to Infants. ideal. Stronger medicines are dangerous to a tiny baby, however harmless they may Good old Castorlal be to grown-ups- . Discussions Remember the name, and remember to buy It It may spare you a sleepless, anxious night It Is always ready, New York. KARL DR. always safe to use ; In emergencies, or REILAND, By for everyday aliments. Any hour of the day or night that Baby becomes fret--' There is bound to be a conflict between science and religion, ac- ful, or restless. Castorla was never cording to the commonly accepted meanings of those words at the pres- more popular with mothers than it la today. Every druggist has It ent time. Ninety-fiv- e per cent of all orthodox religious beliefs are opposed to ism. Electrical Engineers; and the face of the medal. The prize was founded by a bequest in the will of the late Benjamin G. Lamme. SEEKS NEW RECORD of Problems of Life Are Properly Part of Our Religion Society women of Norfolk, Va., donned blue smocks and armed themselves with spiked rods and gunny sacks and, aided by Boy Scouts, cleaned up Hampton boulevard as the first step In their program of beautifying the city. Mrs. Fergus Reid, chairman, and Mrs. C. R. Bulley were caught by the cameraman bard at work. RANDOM NOTES British Scotsman, the first man to dri e a motor car at a speed greater Horn 2ih miles per hour, and who aspires to better the mark of 207.552 miles per hour now held by Ray The Keerli of the United States. tesu will be held at Daytona Beach. Milk Is about 83 per cent water. Fire on farms in the United States take 3,500 lives each year. Reindeer feed chiefly on plant diet, but occasionally eat mice and fish.. Electricity today Is estimated to be 50 per cent below prewar levels when basis. figured on a g Germany produces 2,000 varieties of sausages. The fire of hate usually flashes In the pan. The majority of waiters In restaurants are guests. If poverty Is a virtue it Is making a virtue of necessity. Ve still say sunrise, even though ws k:)W it jtands stilj. the assurances which science affords us. Whatever touches human life is a part of religion and consequent ly certain aspects of politics rigliffullj are discussed in churches. Those who base their beliefs and conduct on what their ancestors set np as right are in error. There is no revelation in the past which is fit to he the guide for the future. What you are, as you are, is your re ligion. that demands work ami effort, it is a world of evolu tion nnd nut evasion. The moment we get better acquainted with problems, and thoughts, no matter how hard or opposed they may seem at the start, we find in them something useful and helpful. The result it worth the effort. Tins is a world Colds, At first itm hatuki's aimnr-t- h. laxative that thoroughly dean! one J i yoor intestines. It the , uaatahln 25c. For Sale tonight n Atii O AMMOHf at AU DrugiU ' |