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Show THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON'. UTAH 1932 . the HOLD- - STOCK in ,;,VES.t suli rvvvv vv v w r stockholders ,h' REN- T- yc v mT the idea of a sea lev and a lock ca ( unal was abandoned al decided upon. v vr v..... different French rpvv nia le attempts to build both failed, one in 1XS9 in 1902. companies t FOR 5 1- Wfjpo r i c leav-in- March 19-2- date, Feb, Clerk or County - notice. Con- - respective sign- - guarJian.-hi-p pjob.te.nd further information. CREDITORS NOTICE TO f0f jstate of iSED-fteor- OBCE FOR SALE U. S. No. 1. Idaho Rural Seed tatoes and Valencia Onion Seed. of Gould Dixon. Po- For First Class Hay see Carroll hebep. c. TAYLOR, Wilson. Payson, Utah. s claims with will present FOR SALE Baled Straw for Sale undersigned at his 3 wires, Touchers to the on or Utah, clean. Baled when in Santaquin, threshdry, large, residence of April, A. D. ed. A. Brockhank. J. Phone 16th day 25v the before 1232. of the Taylor, Administrator Deceased. C. Taylor, Heber of Verfil fcate Spanish Fork, Utah. NAUTICAL nd Pope Brockhank NOVELTIES j for Administrator. Attorneys industrial news HAH Are you informed of the fact that: The following items all concern the Panama Canal, the worlds greatest State road commission con engineering feat. The first survey for an Isthmian of $310,000 for templates expenditure betCanal in Panama n.de by Spain work on U. S. Highway No. f0 18 in 1534? Spanish Fork and point ween of here. The first ground was broken by the ales east Pfije Dry excavation finished when President Wilson pressed the button in Washington that blew up the Gaboa dike on October 10, 1913. The air distance between the Atlantic and Pacific is 34 miles. The Canal channel is 51 miles; j Gaillard Cut was 305 feet above sea level when work was started by the French. The cost of the Canal construction was $338,000,000. The value of old French property was $42,800,000. The Canal runs from northwest to southeast. The Pacific end is 27 miles east of the Atlantic end. This is the place where the sun rises in the Pacific and sets in the Atlantic. The Canal can handle 48 ships per day, if necessary. The channel wid-t- h at the bottom is from 300 to 1000 feet (110 in locks). i o UTAH udy the canal but and the other room hou.e, modern for Ihe furnished. $20.00 per month to right ti caiUJ d Tl7reby party. No large family considered. The United States took over the Fica Marv the of dsy fbe See Mrs. John Staheli. Council Room eanai construction in 1904 and on m Ltah, p.Min Pa vs on City, August 3, 1914, or 10 years later the of Gendins Inquire of, the first ocean Reamer sailed through said of 's? Utah Ave. Payson.' Incorporation The L mted States has use and occ of tor the issAeS t0 provide jupation for all time for a strip of t,f I,r err 0 nibs on each side of center $30 per lvad n t .,r alf3 Hay. Johnsons j'and T ! th'e par value of cent line of the canal. For this it paid in' Ranch, Genola. Lars A. Johnson 3 3 Pe" tpd.j Panama $10,000,000. Cash and pays itr annually $2;0,000. The cities of Pan-FOPres, George C. Chase, SALE Household Furniture. 'ama and Colon are within the 5 mil Darrel brown, Secretary Inquire of Mrs. Frank Wheelwright. limit but are excluded from the a John Brown, Director Phone 142 J. Utah hove arrangement Payson, 4, 1932 mucni-n- d Cor- - Utah Recognized As INDUSTRIAL NEWS Area of ideal temperatures, homes in this area must either be warmed by heating plants or cooled by states Dr. E. equipment, ernon II ill, consulting aerologist of the Holland Institute, who rates as Americas leading authority on From June 6, to September 22, the average daily maxi-mun- f is under 65 itegrees, making some form of heating necessary. However, human dread of winter coll and summer heat is destined to be permanently removed through the recent introduction units that warm and humidify the home air in winter, cool it in summer an make j l ssible 'eon fdvto indoor comfort regardless of the outdoor weather. The report revealed other interesting facts. The hottest day of the summer, for example, is July 21, the on average maximum temperature that day being 91 degrees. The six coldest days of the year are December 30 and 31, and January 1, 10, 11, and 12, the average minimum temperature for those days lieing 19 degrees above zero. L'ah is recognized as one of the ric:ie?t area- - un the American continent for the study of primitive man accoidir.g to Dr. Julian H. Steward, I niver-it- y of Utah anthropologist. In the region near Vernal have been discovered pe.'.roglyphs or pictures engraved on stone which rival those of the ancient Aztecs in master One iare specimen in the Vernal region is of an aneieni pueblo Indian's god ami is unique in that it is engraved in that s, the picture stands out and the tackground is chipped away. Dr. Steward sets the time of this ancient Utah culture as existing about one thou.-an-d to fifteen hundred year-agHe stall's that these people grew corn at this early date and that they fashioned clay fetishes or images as an appeal to the gods to make the oil fertile. What is probably the earliest domestic dog yet discovered in America was found by Dr. Steward in o burial cave north of Great Salt UTAH INDUSTRIAL NEWS Lake. Some notable discoveries of petro-gliph- s Provo Cafeteria opened in Dixon have been made in the canJunior High School building. yons and hills near Beaver, Fillmore, Price, Magna, Moab and Wayne counCedar City of Troy laundry ty. One interesting feature which Dr. Southern Utah opened for Steward points out in regard to the petrighphs is that the ancient engra- recently. vers subjects such as sheep, deer, men, concentric circles and other figures are greatly similar to those found many hundreds of miles from V Utah, a feature which seems to indicate a wide spread civilization as early as two thousand years ago. craft.-man-hi- bas-relie- f, Cedar City Plans being made to Bank of Southern Utah. reopen NO SLEEP, NO REST, STOMACH GAS IS CAUSE Mis. A. (loud says: For years I a bad .stomach and gas. Was nervous and could not sleep. Adlerika rid nie of all stomach trouble and now I sleep fine. City Drug Co. had He Missed the Job 1 Oportunity used to knock now it telephones. Employers look for the quickest way to reach people the telephone directory. Is your name listed? It pays to have telephone service. Why not discuss it with us today? El The Mountain States Tel. & Tel. Co. bu-me- ss 1 Nephi Effort being made to re- Frenchman, DeLesseps, in 1881 at open Nephi National Bank. Arrohead Gas & Oil the Pacific entrance? Cedar City The real work was begun at Cule-brfiled articles of incorporation for Coalville Utah Oil Refining Co. now the famous Gaillard Cut, on purchased Ball distributing of gasoline, oil and other property and plan to products. erect building on property. anuary 20, 1882. i o a, Co. to October 9, inclusive. Save fur these 52 days Payson Has 52 Days Of fV Is Cheapest UlUIIIIIIHIBIlIlllBinKEIBIIKIHIUHlIBISEEIiaiBIBBIIIIIllllliaiiiaiiiiiiMi Ideal Weather A Year International Harvester Farm Implements and Machinery SOLD BY IN COME GET AND OUR WATCH For Announ-cem- e n t of our 9c Sale. SPEC-- J Boated TERMS IAL I massiEEisaazsisKKiisaaaHiaaBiiiiiiiiia SALE OF ANIMALS For DAMAGES FARM MACHINE PRIC Bxcapts from a Talk Given by Finley Mount before Implement Dealers Associations. Complete be r. Copies will aufplttd on Request. Plain and pertinent firm implement Price Trends in the Automotive prices presented during the pa oy Finley P. Mount, v oent of tion and Advance-Rum- i principal spe dealers' con wnter. On each occasio implement as the spoke PPeared national Association of tosnt Manufacturers. Dealer Distribi about to ai Mr. Mount told ervices rendered established impler . ouldasserted that a full easily pr0ve tha tnbution is the most r the farmer i. ti A tarm machinery t earnestly declared Mhkeamadcrderhusi tel? blProviied and se he tv Serhele. an indsi must be 'S maChune lLCh'ne At rf Jf SerV,Cefl' anJ repairs kept re; for speei LnW8 lf the svst fribution should be ;W3uld more serious Juld more ser th the farmer himseli Profit and L marl ST said, -t- he wo industry .KiT' here 'near 8&he Pnt si C raent PnPn,'f'3 .it too anX try. th?ftlat lere is Mr i Profit the l'dl',ni and lnl unpiem accounts Sltan corn;,.,., th" :jXrst ftl,l veraee jiin 5L e andl&n.-- , over of .1,. trucks, ,6 : ,ve i w,s thT ' v0Uir,e of ?r as t.usiness en f i:' "p ,i 22 cents a pound for the cheapest automobile. Even a milk can sells at 21 cents a pound, while an ordinary vise sells at the same price per pound as a combine-harveste- Foreign Sale3 Incidentally, Mr. Mount scotched once more the old falsehood about figures showing that the farm equipment industry has kept pace with the automobile industry in improving the quality and lowering the price of its product. For example, a standard tractor which sold in 1913 for $1420 now sells for $810 a reduction of $610 or 43 per cent, and a far better tractor at that. A 0 tractor, which sold for $1850 in 1916, has been vastly improved in design, power, and efficiency, yet it sells ni .v for $1190. Mr. Mount cited figures released by the United States Department of Labor in November, 1931, showing that since 1926 farm implement prices had declined more than automobile prices. It was pointed out by the speaker that the only farm implements that have increased in price since the prewar period were the old tyjies of horse-drawmachines which, he said, were rapidly disappearing from the picture of American agriculture. He gave as an example the grain binder on which the sales in the United States in 1931 were only about 10 per cent of the volume in 1902. In 114 the total grain binder production was 215,386, whil in 1930 it was only 46,106. American farm machinery selling cheaper abroad than in the United The American He said, States. farm machinery manufacturer sells his machinery both at home and abroad at the same price f.o.b. factory, with additional charges, however, on boxing for foreign shipments." Information on the subject may be obtained from the Agricultural Implements Division of the U. S. Department of Commerce. Mr. Mount also quoted from the Congressional Record of May 12, 1930. telling about an investigation made by Congressman Sloan on this subject, which also proved that this allegation is unfounded. Then theie is the assumption that farm machinery is protected by tariff. There is no tariff on farm machinery except cream separ.uors valued at more than $50. T here has been no tariff to protect farm machinery for nearly two decades, winch fact was conclusively established by Mr. Mount as he 2 excerpts from the Tariff Aits of I ,J 2 and 1930, as well as from the 1026 Yearlmok of Agriculture published by the Inited States Department of (Copies of sections of Agriculture. the Congressional Record, tariff regulations, and the Yearbook of Agriculture covering these point s will be supplied on request.) 3) Cents Spent for Farm The American manufacturer pivs more for his materials and labor," Mr. Mount said, and yet achieves a low cost of production and a high standard of quality whiih keep out competition. Even with lower wages and cheaper materials, the failure of European manufacturers to equip their plants with American machinery and to get low c tt mass production prevents getting tl.e.r costs down where they can meet us. In addition, they do not design and engineer their product to meet American conditions. Not orriv do they not compete with us in the open and unprotected Ameruan market, but we climb over their tariff walls and compete with them in their own countries. American farm mahabitable chinery is sold in cvc-rcountry on the globe, and be it remembered that t lie Ameru an manufacturer sells at no lower price abroad than he sells in the United States Unmatched efficiency m manufai taring operations and quality of the product are the reasons. The speaker presented facts and 10-2- 0 15-3- horse-draw- n Mr. Mount estimated that the total binder production of 1931 was only about 17,000 machines, including tractor binders. Machinery Attacking the popular .misconception about the farmer's expense fir farm implements to till, plant, harvest, and process the crops, the speaker declared that in 1910 this item represented only about 3 cents out of every dollar of agricult tires gross cash income; and he contrasted this figure with 20 cents for wages to hired labor, 10 cents for taxes, and nearly 10 cents for interest. The total value of farm implements and machinery on our farms is only about 3) per cent of the total value of all farm property. Another contrast offered by the speaker was between the price per pound of eleven basic farm machines and of numerous other articles used on the farms. Though the farm machines are by far the most complex in the list they are cheaper by the pound than any of the others. A tractor sells at 16 cents a combine-harveste- r pound and a at 19 cents a pound, as against 15-3- 0 t DELIVERED Per Ton ..... For Satisfaction foll- $6.25 $6.75 t Buy Coal from Established Dealers. t t Chase Lumber Ik Coal Co. EVERYTHING IN LUMBER ANYTHING IN SERVICE PHONE 127 v ) ) ss. of ) Utah County Precinct ) Santaquin I have in my possession the following described animals, which if not claimed and taken away, will be sold at public auction to the highest cash bidder at My Home in Santaquin Precinct, on the 7th day of March, 1932 at the hour of 10 a. m. DESCRIPTION OF ANIMALS 1 old bay mare, branded 25 on the left thigh and 1 suckling colt, no brand visable. 1 bay horse colt, 3 years old, branded heart upside down under bar on left thigh. Said animals are held by mo to secure payment of damages done by said animals. John O. Peterson, Poundkeeper Santaquin Precinct fiCTTy BARCLAYS BELPFUL-HINTS- l Hues Materials Prices labor-savin- We are now selling domestic lump Coal at the owing prices. AT YARD Per Ton , STATE OF UTAH Industry n placements, lip the ,rtSf?t farm I her equipment not sold to farmers. He declared that the 1931 business of the farm implement manufacturers would probably result in a loss, or at best in a very small profit. figures for this forecasting area covering o period of 55 years. The report discloses that on only 52 days of th eyear does the average maximum temperature here remain beetween 65 and 75 degress. These days are from May 4 to June 6, inclusive, and from September 22 ABOl SOME FACTS Payson area has only 52 days o ideal weather a year. That is, day which are not cool enough to call fo a fire in the furnace or too warr for comfort. This is the conclusion of the Holland Institute of Thermology, following an anlysis of official weather Turkish coi TVER try i i r: coffee as they make It You've mbsc-- & la Turkey? If you haven't. Use pulverized coffee freshly ground. a While the water Is boiling demi-tass- e full for each person measure a heaping teaspoon of coffee per cup and mix it with an equal measure of granulated sugar. When the water bolls hard, add the coffee, and when It looks frothy remove It from the heat. After a moment or two, let It boll up again and repeat this still a third time. Then pour It thick and foamy Into the cups and serve It at oime. unAny grounds which may be lxduly large Turkish coffi-- should not b" til cups larger than the It Is always served without cicala. treat - 1 or a Cheerful Kitchen By KATHARINE CRUN1BAUGII to Nature for hints green; though. If the large piece la TF we all A on decoration, reaults would done In a strong color like red, we often be much more satisfying. The most quiet things down by paintgrass and trees are in deeper ing the breakfast nook In jade. If shades of color, distance makes all the furniture were In red It things grow lighter and the sky Is would seem to rush at one as soon light st of all. 8o we should have as the door were opened but, by our floors the darkest, the walls using the red In the right propornext and the ceilings lightest The tion, harmony is secured Just as a larger trees and bushes are In the red line woven in and out of a rug darkest colors of all, greens, dark sparkles and attracts more than II reds and browns. These may rep- the rag were pure red itself. resent the furniture just aa the Blue and yellow make green, so flowers, which are brightest and the dishes may well be perhaps rno'--t outstanding, a hint may give some few of the bigger with yellow In accent of colors for the the room swlss that Is being decorated, a lesson ones In delft blue. Dotted diri-c- t from Nature to keep the curtains with red dots, or with dots most brilliant colors In small quan- of yellow or green, will help In the color balance. So. the basic color tities. Take, for Instance, a kitchen with of the room being green, orange-reyellow and a little blue may a southern exposure. The floor lf may be painted a dark green, the be used to give It Interest and, walls a lighter seafoam green and used In the proper proportion the celling the lightest green of which Is about the proportion that all. Tht kitchen cabinet may be Nature would arrange for herself the result Is a perfectly colored ado green which Is a full of cheerful but balanced room, stiongei color than the wall tone not too coloring, and emigarish but not so strong as the floor. both to stimulate suited well Blight mandarin red will do well nently for the trim or accent color. Or by Its color harmony as well as to the kitchen cabinet may be In wear well for what Is so commonly mandarin red and the trim In jade called, practical purpose d, out-door- s, |