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Show FRIDAY, UTAH THE PAYSON rttRONTfiLE. PAYSON, July 15 Indian Women First to Local Items Mrs. A. R. Wilson ly Rhone 64 Mrs. honor of her daughter, , recent Mattin-ona ,il t ti I unjoin Francom entertain ncky Mrs Jaim Thur .day after-- , Uiu'-w, lust tM ?t is itr.d friends Si enjoyed the happy i f '.he young hi'ide received many lovely : and le . gift-u.ful In r FASTER FREIGHT SERVICE All of our at no additional cost trains cany r pn.'-scne- freight. In emergency cates passenger trains No higher ty))'r 'f Le.s-Caiiua- d Jam. i FraK'jm ann-',u- i the marriage of thmf daughter A! n Mr. I)' an Mattinson, son of Mr. aid Mu. Tom Martinson. The oung e uj)e will reside in Sa.em. Mr. are also handled on C unloads Service is available anyuneie. j I Railroad. Sait Lahe & Utah J Mr-- . e Make Marvelous Laces to South Au. rf Fenfire tourists k'- -u (. d,' c.ti. 1:111 lu.es which are ucu The Heritage American No. 6 Overcoming Bad Architectural Fea7 ! , m pro bl-- id of n by women world. throughout the entire seem, howler, It may as Grunge found in N.uth laces Of the bi. ny l Anenc.l arc not of m in. ide m bj one but of the con- comb lui.g lit re the . By CAUL HECK Consulting well purucular lace which might for a cobweb, so tine .s made has Its tevture and for A h-- en do-u-- n, cn of laiag.iuy bj the In. hail w.iin 'in is lost In the on, its go long t.iat ObsiitrdJ of legends. pap tal es mucli tune aud infinite as known lace, this ahf th, e have nanduti. ami orlj those who daugli-t.- r to mother from fcnmwi the art to do it. n ally know is to be found lace n.iuihiti Tie Vera Frarcom has returned No other country u. Im ony sh where hu-l nn Bulky, Idaho, , lyers are sent it. and man;. in;..-Dud-.- y Amcr-- , McrOiV.ianiul her father Robert f.i-.m'er count ri - m here for it. who had been base to a pur. whole til-1- ; n morrthi. i'u.ij. frei, n l.v m.muftic- m the - are empl'i.'el g. the tnr.. nf 1,... ice-- , if you puss I.t. he Cromar and children of the homes of OC ed deer t.Tf.ipe, Fuiek-- i have been visiting at the ad the Milages, y.m "ill in lle-a fortnight w. n . m it the f.tmly tnun the young IRr.i'V Jej p'on home for homl-hguh, to the old mMtidu'o..ers tlu-- 'c timh.ng frames the user of Mr. and Mm. Alma Fiancotn l.il e.s. Sunday hcie with their Mida!e . II Mr-Junearid parents, Mr. Ms-- . i 1 rwnifMT,'lT",,irn mi n iwrrr rrrrrTrnm mrnn-- r r c . g TAX FREE Francom. Insane Once Believed d to Be Mrs. Jack D.xon entertained the members of the Saturday Bridge club afternoon at her home Saturday memlKtr club (luest-- s ext !usi of, were Mrs. Ray Monson, Mrs. John T. Lant and Mrs. E. E. Robinson. little of llie inner S.tue mind. Insane human of the workings where asylums are really only places the mentally ill are kept. Aud yet when one compares these institutions and the care given to the insane with methods used formerly, the least one can say is that the insane are now handled reasonably. Philippe Ilnel, born in 1743, was not as only an apostle of reasonableness well as of human goodness, but possessed the medical training needed to Devil-ros3esse- 0 ON Firestone Tires & Tubes While Stock Lasts We have a Firestone Tire to meet every price and driving demand for every purse and purpose and every Firestone Tire has Extra Strength and Extra Service because of the Extra Values that are built into them yet they cost no more than ordinary tires. high speed cart. knew fl the cotton coral ptoceM tramformt into a itrong, tough, ilnewy unit. Liquid rubber penetrate tvtry cord and coott tvtry fiber, guarding againtt in- ing the ttrength of the cord body, and giving Ion jot tiro lilt. TWO EXTRA GUM-DIPPE- D CORD PLIES UNDER THE TREAD I hit It a patontod two extra iru f? Gum-Dlppo- d NON-SKI- COMPARE CONSTRUCTION QUALITY PRICE X CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. Chevrolet Ohtrrakt My office will be closed all day Sat- VnmA Ford- - Cbevrolat Whippet fljaiooth Enkln Plymouth Chindlar D!io(ou urday during July and August. TRUCK and BUS TIRES Dr. L. D. Pfouts PAYSON to Reno, Nevada blue-gree- Phone 46 Payson, Utah After 8:30 P. M. Only $1.05 (Station-to-statio- rates) n Plus Federal tax amounts over on 50c TELEPHONE J1 can be hung to reduce the the entrance. These draper.? useful well as decorative can be drawn whenever neceM2 separate the two rooms. We have now prepared our tvL for the additional new piecei iiJS we have wanted for a long time aS which are necessary to complete picture. The next article will Z with these new pieces. u n, Ladies half soles Rubbe or Leather heels 75, & Utah Buy Tires and Tubes NOW! FREE TAXto Stock hand on Subject Our Tires are 20 percent cheaper quality for quality Our FREE Insurance Plan has no Equal NATIONAL TIRE STORE 543 PAYSON, UTAH Harry Tipton fEZ&g23:L;zE:gCg2ZliaBBi!giB:BH&SE23i:ZE&EllMfi f Something Do for Nothing ou believe any .store can or will give Or do you you something for nothing? realize the fallacy of such advertising? There is only one lowest price any merchant can give you. That is the price that remains after he pays for his goods and adds his cost of doing business an.d smallest legitimate profit upon which he can continue to operate. When a store offers you more in hee extras than the price of the article tor an sale, you can be assured that deceit misrepresentation are being practiced. on We offer you the lowest prices possible mi dependable merchandise. Lower me costs thru volume buying and efficient the o chandising methods together with est legitimate profits are responsible our low prices. d our Ten progressive store outlets increase turnover to the extent that fresh new s are constantly arriving. Nature Knows! The stomach prevents itself from being dissolved by its own gastric juices because old Dame Nature wisely nrranged that it should consist of a substance that is immune from such dissolution. In this nature is wiser than the amateur scientist who boasted long and loud that he had invented a liquid that would dissolve anything it touched. Tired of his boasting, a listener silenced him by asking him quickly: What do you propose to keep It year-roun- In? DUKE PAGE AUTO CO. intere.tl'vft PAYSON SHOE REBUILDERS C. F. Reynolds, Prop. One door East of Star Theatre, Payson, by TELEPHONE $1.80 window focal point of by the fireplace. It convart. ward window Into All other work in proportion Seeing, They See Not As there are persons who seem to walk through life with their eyes open, seeing nothing, so there are others who read through books, and perhaps even cram themselves with facts, without carrying away any living pictures of significant story which might arouse the fancy in an hour of leisure, or gird them with endurance in a moment of difliculty. Ask yourself, therefore, always when you have read a chapter of any notable book, not what you saw printed on a gray page, but what you see pictured In the glowing gallery of yt ur imagination. . . . Count yourself not to know a fact when you know that it took place, but then only when you see it as it did take place. Professor Biackie. Notary Public The terra notary public is Hn cient. Among the Romans a notary was literally one who took notes a shorthand writer; hence, an official "hose duty it was to record transactions, certify the authenticity of documents, etc. In English and American law the terra now applies to a person of somewhat similar functions, who takes acknowledgment of, or otherwise certifies or attests, various writings, usually under his official seal, to make them authentic. $1.00 40c Rubber heels rs-pe- r. it This novel Shoe Repairing Mens half soles About TREAD Touoh, live rubber specially compounded for long, slow wear. Scientifically gives greater tracdesigned non-ski- d tion and softy quiet performance. the plans made by the builder, unassisted by the architect. Consequently, many Interior architectural features, now recognized as undesirable, are common to most of these older homes. Our Heritage American room is no exception. The chief trouble in the room we are now doing over is a solitary window that stands directly in the center of the left wall and presents a difficult problem of arrangement. We can overcome this difliculty by building open bookshelves on each side of the window, connected by a window seat. This dnables us to discard the antiquated golden oak sectional bookcase which originally stood opposite the one window. These shelves, together with the new draperies and valances now form an One of interesting wall grouping. the lower book shelves, incidentally, makes an excellent location for a small radio set. The window seat n is topped with a pad of the same material as the sofa to repeat the green color note found in the rug. Old magazines and other odds and ends can be hidden away in the cabinet under the window Beat. By treating the wall in this manner, we form a focal point of Interest around the window and bookshelves which serves the same decorative purpose as a fireplace in other rooms. Another had feature found In many homes is an unusually large entrance way between the living room and the dining room. Here long draperies cast aside the ignorant superstitions regarding the insane. In those days In France, and in fact all over Europe, the insane were flogged, were belieed to be possessed by the devil, were loaded with chains and imprisoned with the sick and criminal. As head of the Bicetre hospital In 1793 and as director of the Salpetrlere in 1793, Plnel cast aside the chains of the insane inmates, substituted warm baths for the cold water immersion and instituted many reforms that seem only natural to us. Claude Lilllugsston also has offered to readers of llygeia Magazine the biography of Philippe Piuel, another of the Pioneers of Medicine. construction, and tho cord ptios aro to placed that you got 56 stronger bond between tread and cord body, and tests show S6 greater protection It sets againtt punctures and blowouts. a new standard lor tire performance on CORDS The FUwtonc polented GUM-DIPPE- D W e l.noiv so Short Story of Paper the time of Alexander the Great, paper began to be manufactured from an Egyptian plant called papyrus "hence comes the name It became so valuable that the export of paper from Egypt was prohibited. The Greeks and Romans did not have the secret and so they commenced to make use of skins prepared for the purpose. The product of sheepskin was called parchment and that Finalof calves was called vellum. ly these pieces were made up into a continuous roll and called volumen, which is the origin of the word volume. Julius Caesar was responsible for making writing material In the form of pages, which was more convenient titan the great rolL In inscribing the papyrus the ancients made use of a piece of bamboo cut much in the shape of the pen as we (I & UTAH INDUSTRIAL NEWS Union Bus station movCoalville ed to new quarters at 77 West South Temple. Construction Reynolds-El- y Ogden Co. submitted low bid of $112,737 for lining tunnel, galleries and construction of section of road in supplemental highway construction project in Zion National Park. Lewiston Open air dance pavilior being built by local Lions Cub at Lewiston First Ward. Pea factory opened Sniithfield here. Number of local streets Logan being improved. Delta Work started on local park, Garland Dr. C. E. Wardleigh opened offices in bank building here. William Bowen erected Logan new super service station on First West Street. Price Columbia Welfare Association completed new recreation build :rg at Scofield Reservoir. Tooele Smelter operations resumed short time ago. C alviile Utah Ail Refining Co. opentd new service station. v. Bigelow Weaver of the homes In this MANY show the Influence of the local builder, because the majority of the older homes were built from " be Art Diroctor, Our buyer is now at the Chicago market, taking advantage of the Pr low prices and new styles being offere -- HOUSE BUY AT THE ONE PRICE AND SAVE s IB Dixon- - Taylor - Russell C 1 |