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Show THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH FRIDAY, JULY i5i ijS2 The Pay son Chronicle J. HAROLD MOUNTFORD, PUBLISHER rublished every Friday at Payson, Utah, a city of progreesi. 3,500 loyal, and contented citizens. tittered at the Post Office at Payson, Utah County, Utah, as ami aiatier. aecond-cl- a SUBSCRIPTIONS Year $2.00 6 Months $1.00 1 ADVERTISING RATES ON APPLICATION. SCIENCE FORECASTS BEAUTY in tbe HOME EidDcnuliNa NEXT GREAT DELUGE Meltinij Poar Ice Caps to Cause Inundations. Washington. We S' i speak of ihe Ice age as if It belonged to tin re liuve mote geological past, Gi o'ng. reached the conclusion that there were several ice ages. What is more, the lust Ice Age, known ns the qua; crinrv our Is only about half o'er, Utermil ice" or blistering summers. eternal snow are figments of the pothe etic imagination. Veiy great lee sheets In the Arctic ami Antarctic regions are melting ami pourlng their torrents Into tire oceans. The s'o-.vl- - earth must inevitably change lis as pect and Its climate. How the change Is slowly tailing place and what the remit "'ll! tie has been considered by snob aide geologists, physicists and me; coriogist s as Prof. Sir F.dgeworth Daid of tie Prof. University of Sydney, Wilhelm Meinardus of Gnluigen ami a score of others. The latest is ir. William J, Humphreys of the United States weather bureau, who recently addressed the American Meteorologi cal soeiety on the subject, sumnmri. lng old views and modifying them in tiie light of the information gathered In the Antarctic regions by the Pyrd expedition and in Greenland by the Prof. Alfred Wegener and his companions. Glacial Sheets Reduced by Half. The glacial sheets that now cover the North and South poles were once 12,(XXi,fXK) square miles in extent-m- ore the present total than land urea of the globe. In the course of about 700, Oi 0 years they have melt ed down to their present area of about 000,000 square miles. The ice-oGreenland alone is ten times vast er than the area of the State of New echo soundings York. Wegeners showed that it Is over 0.000 feet thick near the center of the island and about 4,000 feet thick near the edges of the bowl over which it spills. Here, then, we have enough Ice to provide a layer of water one mile thick over 700,000 of Greenlands 827,27 5 square miles of surface. To this we must add water which another layer of mile-deewould be spread over 3.200.0(H) square miles of Antarctica's 3,400,000 square - a, -. My best ideas come to me at unwhen Im Like momients. expected shaving or driving along the highway r reading a new book. We have all these sudden flashes xperienced ivhile walking down a street or talk- ing to a friend or even taking a Sat- hooky from school smoked cedar bark grew into manhood pair of long pants that our grandfather sil that time bad wayside. to go fishing, behind a barn with his first and he thought was an old fos stranded by the urday night bath. Just a few nights ago I picked up a late issue of Cosmopolitans mag azine and started reading Zane Greys newest thriller, The Lost Wagon Train. He had in his leading character, Stephen Latch, a violent man who, as an ambitious youth, had been harassed and driven by friends and a scorned love into a life of horror and outlawery that haunted his one time finer ambitions that even murder and pillage and terror could not blot out. While I was absorbed In this tale of blood and death and tumult a sudden thought flashed over me. Some years back I had read Thoreaus had Thoreau memorable Walden. a queer notion that man can be sheltered and clothed and fed by his own labors and to demonstrate this he lived alone for almost three years in the woods. He built his own cabin, made his own clothes, and raised his Sfi vu I ll 1'uM Cartagena, Colombia, Where Modern Architecture Vies with Old. rail Stai'-sin in! Miii iji, 1:..; rmi't lii.c- - amt motor highways are Iiimi liver channels in lac!!;! ;e !i.e movement of from th-- in .ml to P.urran am! CilMiig ::l oil the Atlantic, it amt Buenaventura 01. the Iacitie coast jii'ni net s one-fifi- 1: f I.ii-mV- a. Ii n Tin se t en r ii Improvements-havbecome iiu;because of hi.- volume of extin rapi !iy it. Approxt ports from that roan' ry. n of ntately tf t! most charming living room Is the one pictured above, with its broad windows on one side, its simplicity of furnishing and its excellent taste. And, withal, it is a comfortable room, easily kept clean and in good order. Perhaps Its most interesting feature, however, is that it shows In one complete picture the wide range of home uses to which modern chemical products are being adapted both for decoration and furnishing. Rayon in new colors, surfaces and designs plays an Important role for chair upholstery, window drapes and curtains, the latter, a white acele taffeta, being a new de-- velopment in glass curtains. The are in copper-colore- d over-drape printed with white peonies and green leaves, harmonizing with the gold rayon moire A oi me wing chair and th erink rayon rep of the other, wt acele taffeta is used for th u shades. The walls are covered with wt muralart, a washable wall fa, the love-se- is upholder at green fabrikoid and the desk w in colored pyralln, the aao terial being used for electric on plates and wall picture. The ha dor has a duco finish. Cellophw used for various wrapping the making of the artificial n on the window ledges. A aua dyed copper, peach and ra seamless carpet cover the i It pet ms but yesterday to Mother when was in the bloom of youth sought after and ourted by the youths of her day. She, too, felt the Is (in. n.Oi'().i!M;l Mem- - of h;'.!i.;m:s, lure of the bright lights and dream0, barrels pel ro'erie.. JjP.mi.im ed of leaving home to attain fame and i.f piali worth of goal an! ?1.7.! and the books in the case it other side of the room are boom fortune on the stage. She, like you, mini are expo;:, 'I from Coiomtiia to fabrikoid. Mahogany is the vvorhi urn In S annually. had her thrills at receiving her first used for shelves, commodes, a is a's Cojee export bepresent from a new boy friend or tables and chairs, all being til a very ini as will ns prmlu'-tin clear duco. ing asked for a dance by a strikingly factor in the fife of tin eoitn portant handsome young ntan. How passe !M) in More cent than try per general. v.-she thought your grandmother was ? A r,:'- of tin annual of (.mimbiu. which r.inj'.'iii b.bk home for insinuating that she was on the miles. is the second ( o u r of Tenth and is exported to I ' The earth is steadily growing warm country itt the wir-ldIAia way to perdition the first day she at a very er. As all the Ice at the two poles tile Fiilteii S::iti-- . put powder on her face and touched For: a stupendous volume of water melts her cheeks with color! -' or vi comniunwill he released. Professor David con Fruit in Temperate Zone 'i.ir.I Li IV I.::;. Co. Parents are just grown up boys servativeiy estimates that the sea levThe sequidilta. the chavote, the and girls who know from bitter ex- el will rise 00 feet. Professor Mein atcee. y.HiiSiY&Uun breadfruit, Inekfrult. mangos Doctor estimate. Rrdus doubles that the fundamental differperiences teen, sapodilla and durian are some of ences between tight and wrong. The Humphreys, with the studies of the tropical fruits that are not yc-him, believes that common in the markets of the tern trials and tribulations of youth are and Wegener before Sirr.p-German Remedy Such goods the rise will be 151 feet. Toma foes, eggplants mostly imaginary. Sensible young are nothing uew, ns we see by the perate zone. Slomac-- i Trouble' For lime-- , oranges, letu people appreciate that parents who marine fossils found on the lops of pomegranates, i!.u on3, grapefruit, bananas, pineap i.gri.am remedy, Ad- are seemingly in re- the Rockies, Andes and oilier moan pies, figs, dates and alligator pears hr iva.Iio.! the Ln Fit bowel, to tain modern inventions are not ranges. spect as familiar as many of the native stomach j C'r.g dose stops ga? trcuvic. of the Future. in The lifes Deluge experiences of fruits of the temperate zone. own food. And he lived and proper-ed- . out wa.v.fog which causa 10.000 30.1XM) or within and years So, and sorrow, joy gladness bloating. City li rug- Co. there will be another deluge. Salt waThoreaus works stand out as some ter will sweep over the continents, b' V VL 4t 1, w of the greatest in all literature. A leaving only the higher land dry. And that, little children, is how Holland will be Inundated. Fish will comparatively small fraction of his swim In Buckingham palace and Westtime was used to care for his phys- the Lincoln Highway began. minster abbey, for most of England Co. IYsaiY ical needs, leaving a greater part will He beneath the waves. The I insfashione-old to be ;f uTS afraid and travel thru for reading, leisure, Truth needs not many words, but ert of Sahara will be a great inland Service Above AT tub states Dr. II. his small section of woodland. a fase tale, a large preamble. sea. What Is now New York will tie Kleinseduof Iimi.It, ilircr.or health Why pay mere for less. marked by the upper stories and towSome days loafing seemed more im- cation cl the National Tuberculosis as ers the taller of iTEMTlffii they Phene 107 skyscrapers to this man than anything Todays Memory Gem: portant The present generation Association. else so he loafed. He did whatever A man is no greater than the things jut out of the water. is coming to know that many of the Walter ItVbv, Local In an Inundation which would thus belief? of their fathers are groundless. his ambition dictated, not what the he finds pleasure in doing. would which and Mm1. change geography Tlii re was a time, not a generation world or others demanded. Reading be accompanied by a rise In temperaago, when the fear of tuberculosis AUK V 0. 7: VIA I! Thoreau has taught me one thing, To live without loving is really not ture, the climate would return to what the general public amounted among Fervico Mgr. the Is roamed was dinosaurs when our life is what wre will to mlake it living. to an unreasoning phobia, based on gof dense and earth dank, jungles not what others would have it be. Ladv Attendant igantic ferns grew In what are now o LWhere were you last Pennsylvania and Canada. Palms and Father The conceit of youth is born with night? alligators would flourish at the poles as they did millions of years ago. eacr new generation. Youtr and parSon It's a lie! 'I-What will become of man if climatents alike should relaize that youth Ice thus are ic conditions changed? is always young. Dad, too, played Dont tell anyone I told fou so. sheets In high latitudes produce strong contrasts In temperatures between the H44W44HhH444HHHW4-Hm1,'!hIhH,WmH,polar and equatorial regions. Winds, storms, weather that changes from day to day are the result. Man flourishes under such conditions. If the torrid zone were to become even more torrid than it is, and If what are now frozen tracts around the North and r ? South poles are to hear 3 life, mans food supply will not be what it Is now. Prof. G. S. Simpson of the British advanced the :: meteorological office hasMousteria-and Us. Cliellean, that theory ?r-t $ other races of men that once (lour fT Ished In southern Europe were wiped k v v out because the climate changed and the belief that it was hereditary that inedible vermin took the place of the animals that were hunted. No therefore a family taint, and that i; one can tell whnt may happen if a was necessarily fatal. often tlhs dread was so widespread as to result new carboniferous era should follow Make the moat of your vaexamples of the warming of the earth. Man Is in opposition to the building of sa-'cation train. by traveling by low R0UND-TMabout as old as the present Ice age. If toriunis. Pimple lliouMit the air ol the Reach your destination hours season fake It. will survive would be he neighborhood if Is a question contaminated or days sooner without fa Pedestrians sometimes tods detours to over the smoothest tigue avoid these institutions. PAYSON In one ,g roadbed on earth Union Oregon Asks People to norant community, smoke blown toPacific! T Walk on Capitol Grass ward the town from the chimneys f Liberal stopover privileges. cr Do tl.o J64.58 institution can almost provoked a you w.;!l: Salem, Ore. Not only " Delightful side trips. Choice Maintaining the quality of our products is Omaha 554,58 panic because it was believed of return routes. Final returr on the grass in the Capitol grounds 5,18 Kansan City one trust that we guard with the utmost with germs. limit, October Slat. here, you are Invited to do so. .J20.00 Chicago much of this fear has be deHal Today Hess State of care. It is our desire that each customer Secretary .54,40 New Y'ork dispe.led by a more general under Consult local agent clared recently that, while there were Orleans New we serve shall be absolutely satisfied with of standing just how tubereulosi no Keep off the grass signs on the about lower far 90 Los Angeles We know that in contracted. the quality of his purchase. Why not make Portland Capitol lawns, visitors carefully kept jjij.OS with shorter return Instances the germ passes from to the walks. Boston X- "- JH5.33 use of this customer-assured-satisfactiick to the well who are in close limit. of Oregon wants them to state "The Washington, tart-of- ten In the same familv" policy the next time you buy lumber? circl enjoy the lawns," he said. For further Inforaattoa. With proper to up signs are we put precautions, which So going See Local A cent be by on explained doctor walk any tie grass.'" or iiu reading, 'Please O. S. SPESCER, General there need be little danger of infection. Now that people no on Pick 240 Type of Gra dread tuberculosis with the old horror' C. N. Though Durham, they are in me willing to take the step emss-Una is not one of the so EVERYTHING IN LUMBER ANYTHING IN SERVICE vv.iicti not only mean D .w uni BlonmuM. L. adequate treatH. Dr. 127 states. PHONE ment -r the patient, but ,t The Overland Route? colic :;n has security frera verslty botanist, the disease to those who surround him specimens of grasses trum tins s: :te. In daily life, .. : ; K I cord-de-ra- (V.--:n!- nin-.j-'.i- p o!-'- i lm-os- eoTee-pr'-duoin- g at-en- -y in-on- ; : t P9 h 4 - - o C Fear of Dicenss rp tUimS fYrtery IS ? tsteealjjsis iV "v FARE S are way rVl1 ce-EsasJEF&- a T DOWN Unusual Travel Bargains Quality Always T ... $36-6- a on I- Chase Lumber & Coal Co. j f- . mm ipacdpdc |