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Show THE PAYSON CHRONICLE. IWYSOY Conics Now Urge to Buy New Hat MercolizcdWax Keeps Skin o- -- r tii i Who Was Who? Young rA a tJt'Z By CIIFIvlE M('.1I0I.S B.xouu Sally Scz I Hy lent ,u in Ru.U Circu. Popular ..f the lav or.te pastimes . . L be. being barred .i, a wrestling nu.li, ,.f large crowds ,! ,u in- uKS'1,,sMon is cheap and 1,1 t'.i re , is it dared to be, In the to none. One a n, to appear i known I,',, n a succession in no n, Jus a , MUCH DEPENDS ON CARE OF SEPARATOR Writers Advice It bVAVAV.VAVAVAVAVAV HARRIET LIVERMORE Will Be Well to Follow. "A l iitoit (,f t ti,e mat Will I'1 il attend tl,,l heir man Is I a e' ' Followers defeat. - , W.t!l"Ut de- - 1. lean Snappy Game , sai- - nut's throwing j j. kV if :1sKim1 could Mu? Volume? World. Oldest to rid's elle-- t book is said re- China in discovered , u,' "re wooden eVlv U censut, of 73 with string, t,,getlier , S1,;.,,.:, i. v v. c. rrt' a Fre.h-Ai- Autocrat r in that position for the day. Record Waterspout ever reThe h:Jn- -t waterspout weathStates United corded bv the and feet high 5,104 was bureau er South May Wales, New off was seen M'N 10. Land Damaged by Fire In the On much of the range land We.st there is serious erosion of the soil where overgrazing and fires have thinned out plant growth. Ungallant Calculation EuEvery man is, according to ropean' scientists, worth $0,000 to his country at birth, while womans worth is placed at $4,eOO. Land of Agriculturi.ta Ninety per cent of Ecuadors population is estimated to be dependent in some measure on agriculture for its living. Indian Edible The wild flower Is sometimes called Indian turnip because Indians used to cook th roots for food. lt Transparent Man You had bettor Doctor There Pathm is no doctor, (iet my wife ee right through me. be need for that, stie is able to RHEUMATIC relieved this quick way Vjt, c a il the stabbing pains of rheumatism are crippling you, rub on good old St. Jacobs Oil. Relief comes in a minute This famous remedy draws out pain and inflammation. Its the quick, safe way to stop aches and pains of Rheumatism, Neuritis, Lumbago or Backache, Neuralgia or swollen Joints. No blistering. No burning. Get a small I bottle at any drug store. a Quite Archaic "r (home has been kicked by lmr-eI low dreadfully obso." lete; Str.iy Stories. Feeling Stale ? Few are free from the occasional constipation that comes from irrertulareatlnaand hurried llv- - l?ftJLcUaM?'oure,f Promptly the heaviness and that comes now and thendrinlc a cup or two f Gar-ut att Is natural . J", v7iT ?;.complete,v harm- hpltndid, too, for children At your nearest drug store ni GARFIELD One of the chief causes for variations In the per cent of butterfat lies In the operation und care of the cream separator, says the Dakota Farmer. The belief that the percentage of varies with the feeding of the cow is not correct, for none of the experiment stations have ever found a method of feeding tliat would main tain the milk flow and at tin same time increase the percentage of fat over a long period of time. Some of the tilings to watch carefully are: 1. Position of the cream or skim-mill- ; screw. Any change in tins screw will affect ttie cream test. 2. Speed of the separator. Ubhness of the cream increases with the speed. A speed indicator is recommended for the separator. 3. Temperature of the milk. The cooler the milk the richer the cream. Milk should be separated as soon as possible after milking. 4. Richness of tiie milk, means rich cream and taken into consideration change of season. 5. Rate of milk Inflow, separator supply tank valve open to full capacity. Smaller inflow means richer cream and less volume. 6. Vibration of t he separator. Vibration decreases the rictiness of the cream. 7. Dirty separator bowl. Slime in the separator bowl reduces Its diameter, and at the same time the centrifugal force exerted upon the milk, cnuslng thinner cream. TEA id- - Utp i ovi r makes you Miiuliv, Hobby ? ' s vv.isbin the car. I U what ' kdi a law to execute It. Kill COLD GERMSl Cleats head instantly. $cps cold spreading. Sprinkle your tanckerchtef during the day ycur pillow at night. ' ' ' v-' Roughage Important in Dairy Cattle Feeding Many of the abnormal conditions experienced in dairy cattle feeding which in the past have been attributed to other causes have probably been due to lack of proper quality In the roughage. If corn fodder rather than corn silage must be a part of the dairy feed supply for this winter, start now to put it in such shape that It can be kept clean, bright, and of the best possible quality. Attention given now to safeguarding palatability and quality In corn fodder will pay big returns later In the winter. Fodder should be shredded If possible. Shredding or chopping may not increase the digestibility of fodder but does make it possible to store such feeds In much smaller space and under shelter where Is quality can be safequarded. Corn fodder should not be used as the sole source of roughage. It Is better to feed It only once a day, preferably the last thing at night, feeding liberally so that dairy cows are not forced to pick it over too closely. To force cows to feed over com fodder too closely is poor economy. Forcing cows to oat weathered, moldy, fodder from the frozen, or snow-fillefield or stock is the worst of folly. Successful Farming. d Pro ing Good Bull Qm X w AS HAS been and always will be midseason, the first gestuie winter-wearwoman makes toward spring Is to buy a new but. Seeking sign' of spring fashions followers will find their fondest hopes realized in the realm of millinery where miladys chapeau lias blossomed forth ere snows have melted from the ground, In full regalia of Mowers, ribbons and refreshing straws. Which may be taken literally for more (lowers are being used than is nsu il for tliis time of Hie year, and straws of every description are flourishing at such a rate as to lead those who watch vvliiih way the wind blows" to prophesy tliat it is to be a straw sea in which a n.-v- son. The new shapes are thrilling. So different! So far ns the beret, ttie sailor and the cloche are concerned, perthey are staging a sort of formance. All three are In the limelight with, however, startling variations. High spots on the millinery program are, lirst of all, the tendency of hriins to turn up at the back. Even the fa miliar cloche makes itself look new by turning its brim up flat to Its crown at the back (see the cloche pictured in lower right corner of the illustration). Then, too, hats must be worn at an nngle. As to the Jaunty beret, it simply clings to one side of the head, and how It stays on is often a mystery, yet not such a mystery, fur, believe It or not, hatpins are in again. That is. some of the smartest berets made of black satin (ever so guml looking for mldseason) are held in place on the head with two pins thrust through the crown. Then, again, the popular quill trimming, as the first model in the picture shows, Is preferred. So flat are many of these little hats, they are called pancake berets. Many of them are made of satin ribbon, ot tiers of fabric, especially black satin, while tlm.-- e of all-st- pearl-knobbe- hand-sewe- All DRUG STORES d O V A7 h vlf V F , rs I'.'V;!. J f; - ? 'Si. - Pick Winter Additions With Thought of Sprinc; I n al ' ! (or spring. n and cci1, not is over, h"vvevir, ter ioti to tiie win reparations nnd n rv h ore ter wardrobes n uv be ru real spring clnCo cun he worn v Hi ntif menace of pnenr'i' r, a and 'her Styles are I w, nter sport II, P,. suit in b tie CO 'I '"V. '1 e hit'g hHd n:-- -l ti, "iii i 1 1.. n ti.gh, 1? in biou-- e a! a t.r.ng g fi Luke Ik.r ,d 7 , p. r f ((''!;' a g f,,r (old f eg f , Zf ro ion at the lie pr.n tic.il .Lor wool long s '1 - f - ir vv i colony of lines in BttHer county, Pennsylvania, reiently made an tin usual recor bv prodving IS pound of honey in one d iv. i evils riag Scarf , a t Lake City, No. b'd : tl " -:i C( s. h x r into the i , s t ro it v .v g - ih p"s-Mhl- e in vmir r i ;ntf men sigh for each spent nickle. You can make their palates tickle, With the teasing, pleasing flavor, Of an Interinoun-mad- e pickle. Most tasty and inexpensive ) hen j latronize i -- a vc a Home CAN I1K KXCII ANUKD KOR FINE WOOLEN MKItCII ANPIHK VV RITE Original Utah Woolen Mills HALT I ASF CITY Tins WEEKS PRIZE it ; STORY George Washington and Abraham Lincoln, two of our greatcsl presidents, were as different at two men could he . Yet they wert alike in that they both wanted nothing but the best for their country. As they wanted the Iwst for their country, wc the people of the West, want the best for our country and our homes. Of course, this problem is solved by buying Made floods. We help the country by helping home industry, and we help our homes by getting the best values for oul money. We can choose nothing better t serve for the coming holidays ir February, as well as our daily use than Intermountain Made Goods MABEL COLEMAN, Milford, Utah Inter-mountai- quoted almost as much as Shakespeare and more parodied than any other work In the English language Nor was Alice Liddell, more familiar to us as Alice in Wonderland, so much different from most children, who find the hooks without pictures and conversation their elders read so very dull But she could boast the friendship of Hilaries Lttlwldge Hodgson, professor of mntlietrmllcs at Oxford university, who could be persuaded on occasion little girls to entertain with tiie most delightful of fairy fantasies. Alice first had her adventures In wonderland during an afternoons boat ride on Hie river, with Hodgson at the oars and her two little sisters sitting tinpplly In the slern. Then were created those "quaint events, the everlasting tea party with the Mad Hatter nnd ttie Sleepy Dormouse; the duchess crazy garden party; the lobster quadrille, the curious lullaby for the baby who "sneezed because he knew It teased." So delighted was Alice with her mlventiires that the author printed them out, Illustrated them, signed them with his pen name Lewis Har-rolHnd presented them to her ns A Christ nuts Gift to a Hear Child In Memory of a Summers Hay." Just a few years ago Alice, In financial straits, sold the precious manuscript at auction for $77,()ki, and It was sule seqtienlly resold to un American collector for SLVMKKC 1 story-hungr- Send for FREE HARDEN BOOK Contains 100 paw fully lllustrmUd. According to Inclination Men's thoughts are much accord ing to their inclination. Bacon. SPRING PLOWING . . with use of Caterpillar Tractoi , 1 oldest and leading track-ty- p tractor. Prominent farmers owt success to these machines. Write for descriptive catalogs. ILgN l" ROBINSON heenu-- new Landes Tractor & Equipment Co Salt Lak City and Trtmonton, Utah SPERE TENT & AWNING Co. 270 SO. WEST TEMPLE Everything CRUSOE Daniel Defoe was a paper mun, able to see tiie "story in a current news yarn concerning tiie rescue of n marooned sailor from a desert Island tliat we have today that universal favorite "Robinson Crusoe. The yarn upon which he based his tiook was about one Alexander Selkirk. English mariner born at Largo, who early went Into priFife-hirIn the South seas and by vateering 1701 tun) earned promotion to command of Hie good ship Cinque Ports. As (be result of a quarrel with his captain, lie was at Ids own request at Juan Fernandez, a tiny set some 350 miles west of the eon-- t of Chile, where he lived for four voir- - and four months, much, per-li- a -. ns did the character he He was finally rescued by c.ipt Woodes Rogers and returned At Hie time of his to civilization dentil Selkirk bad attained rank of lieutenant on H M. S. Weymouth. Not only was It ills story upon wtiiili Defoe built "Robinson Crusoe. tint Juan I ernandez. Is today frequentas Crusoe's island, nnd ly known boa-i- s not only many of tbe vary umbrella trees that figure In the story, but n Crusoes cave, and. near the summit ot its highest mountain, Selkirk's Lookout, a tablet, placed there in is ;x In honor of tin original Robinson Cruoe! IS ITgood Caterpillai in Canvas Goods e -- Baffled by the Lowest There is not so contemptible i plant or animal that does not con found the most enlarged under standing. Locke. Ask Your Druggist For APEX ASPIRIN AN INTERMOUNTAIN PRODUCT e, 1912 t'l.lun ) A Whose Isnt? idea of a perfect mai is subject to frequent revision r. Bluffton girls News-Banne- NEW MOTOR OIL Free From Carbon Land of Little Rain Twenty minutes of rain in a yea is sometimes all that souther. Egypt gets. CLAUDE NEON LIGHTS El FeTRtr At Products Corporation Silt Lake Clt 104ft So. Main GtZ A A per VwUU week will h paid for the best article on Why you should use Intormonntain Similar to made Goods Send your story in .above. prose or verse to Intermoun tain Predicts Column, P. O. Box 171 7, Salt Lake City. If your story appears in this column vou will CJEI receive check for ftfl 7UU -- f .r Industry. YOUR WOOL n"v froth Heart Throba v ii r n.it. tl.cr A siientilie writer poms nut tliat weir later Hit M,(t s.1,11 ct! lng vonA can ot radio hr, tigs to amplitle.ition die-It Ins tint vvi'hout til d ro our ot the aou,- - in a ears hobble the t is Hie the ( at it r! of a ro. dt nnd Hie mothball nioienibir clamor In e to it that tills a" nil g lo ot the an oti'oti." heart 'll,e plain t ' in a j J cd,,r an fab radio, al-- o la, tig- - the babunampl.hed H d loo! - like wool, r;(. yi, urge 1b.it looks more like ble of (tie hardholbi! egg, and tiie ool or i' g" holee fur clamor in the h, hi ot 'he toothpaste mi ii wo, d ia the n.art-t agent. Mil, ncapol.s Journal. k. .a a fru Mi' t ro -- r rhno-- e inter out'd spring as U,'l nni'-- t If jou Jn'-to vv i ar t.r,d r vour nurt ifiotl ' H e fir however, anv'1. tg o it c.m t e w s v tak'ng Bv mo account, to A v I pprl-winkl- t-M- i N. U Western Newsnaoer Union. 1932 If you would like to know what some of the colors are that will find themselves In conspicuous seats of approval for the spring style shows, take your little net and chase a few butterflies. If it Is too cold now Ibcn go to the nearest museum, or library, and study the gorgeous colored plates and specimens. They carry many future fashion secrets on their delicate wings, not alone for colors, hut for tiie gracefulness of their slender bodies, nnd the exquisite combinations of shades and nulances that tbev scorn to have captured while hovering over myriads of brilliant flowers Watch tiie blues orofnily nnd note the delicacy of ihange in Hie tones Hint you find. Th.e same elusive shades will tie found In your spring frocks. There will lie hints of of ditJv sapphires, and of ametln Kts behind Idle ntKts. 1 V. paints i GO TO BUTTERFLIES FOR SPRING COLORS M HOI XS IIEKIE By i the perNorth D ikota h is r. dm eL-centage of to I if tnbareni is inf1 herds to n viry lo.v degree r.' d Is exnecred-- i pected to qualify for complete itization within a year. Whittier emphasized. The straw sailor worn wit h a lilt and a tilt is outstanding for spring; The model centered in the picture Is of black straw. Paris lints declare a vogue for rough shiny straws nnd for lustrous cellophane effects. Of ttie sailor here illustrated, It may be said that It has a very conservative pose In some Instances the brim Is worn at such an nngle that It would seetu tliat only a hatpin would save It from falling off. As a "last word" hat fashion, we call attention to the pert little shape shown in the lower left corner of t lie picture. It Is one of the Louis Seize models which you will be hearing much about the coining season. Its characteristics are its shallow crown, the narrowness of its brim and, most important of ail, the upturn of this brim at ttie back. Imagine this model In straw or in felt, for It Is shown In both. Sometimes It Is hanked In at tlte back with flowers, then again rib hon bows are mnssed In a way to fill Smart In the space over the coiffure. Barisiennes nre wearing these little coquettish shapes at a daring angle It remains to be seen bow popular the very shallow crowns will become wdth American women. Watteau bandeaux hats are very much In fashion. FOR WINTER SPORTS Newly freshened cows should not be fed heavily at first. A warm bran mash Is very beneficial immediately after freshening. Ground oats, bran, and oil meal can tie fed later. overdraft. tropical, Intenbe, ami act, tn soul and souse, tilrmlHi In a like degree mxui and the devotee. . . . V' y 'x Forty per cent of the counties In the United States are now free from tuberculosis. If the ftruur is to lie properoiis he must ki ep tiie sod prosperous. Nature Is one le riker that will not grant an thought 7 The exchange plan followed by the 'Bull Franklin County association made It possible to keep alive until Ids daughters were proved the Holstein bull. Segis Goliah, one of two sires recently added to the long list of proven ones In Idaho. Five of his daughters averaged 13,415 pounds of milk and 472 pounds of fat in a year, an increase of 29 per cent In milk and 35 per cent In fat over their five dams. Five daughters of another Holstein bull. King Ormsliy Colantha De Kol 8th, averaged 10 per cent more milk and 13 per cent more fat than their dams, but this one was dead before being proved. He was owned by of Ovid. Idaho Brothers Brown Farmer. Tiie Holstein Friesian World gives Idaho credit for having nine herds of Holstein cows, containing a total of 172 head, that are doing herd tet-- , lng. Only five states have more herds on te.st and only 10 have more cattle on test. woman In med circle about the New Eng- V Ian i he.it 111 ill "Snow bound" the picture of tb. u "not unfeured, half welcome Nor giioM," tiie woman evangelist. u the pu'tme an imaginary one. I l.n iet Livermore was a real woman and a somewhat notorious figure in a day when womans place was emplult- icallv in the home She had traveled vvidiiy pleached frequently and ehv qmntly ot the immanent second coming ot the Christ, ami once had de- tied every tladition ot her se by talk- ' nV ' vVk' J ing belore congress, and twice oil tiie same day. lor some time site had made her home with Lady Hester Stanhope until the two had quarreled over a horse they both desired to ride when the Messiah should reappear. On tier return to Amenut she talked herselt in and out of .the good giaoes of the people of Plymouth, Mass. She ollered to give a tree lecture In Hie village dim eli 'Three people In sue cession entered while she was speaking, leaving tiie door open behind (hem and necessitating a pause tn Iter elo-- i q lienee and her request to close IL si raw braid will be very fashionable. After the third repetition of tiie ot-- ! The toque or beret will) a peak Is also fense she became obviously furious exploited. In faet. the peaked crown and ret used to proceed until one of is a favorite topic among tlcsigm rs Hie audience volunteered to ad us At the lecture's dose Brims are taken for gi anted this door keeper. season. They excite Interest in that the speaker announced site had for their contours are so unusual. A fa sale n certain brand of pills, and asked vorite among youthful fashions is wliar those who had interrupted her to reis called the baby brim," winch urns, deem themselves by being the first to up nil around in an even cuff. Ttie buy hat at Hie top, to the right in this group, is a version of this new mode ALICE IN WONDERLAND This style Is very smart in felt, either in pastel coloring or in street shades many little girls Just turned Note the upright positioning of the NytlT find themselves suddenly befeather trim High effects like this come heroine of a story book destined express a trend which is being greatly to lie translated into twelve languages, Dairy Hints A Sure Sign r Mr i but-teri'- Qtalurat 'Xamlivt Qrinh. ' sN A Ike kk' hand-operate- has an official who hw much fresh each day decides to street admitted should be are locked windows the and cars, now London liy LouiscrM. Comstock J n-M- W. N. U.S. L. Vveik No. 320 |